We just asked the same question on the radio side when we had Organic Valley on with us. Not sure, would be our take on it.
Yet it is worth trying. You will see the financial and environmental benefits to farmers and consumers of using organic practices. The food system would be much different in this scenario. Production would be more local and diverse. Transportation of food would get cut way back. We'd see significant output come from non-traditional sources, including off of urban roof tops of large buildings. Software would play a key role in making farms less water dependent and resilient.
Maybe we should re-phrase the question and ask if we can feed some number in a healthy manner? That we can do.
Can we feed 10 billion people on organic farming alone?
Organic farming creates more profit and yields healthier produce.
It’s time it played the role it deserves in feeding a rapidly growing
world population by John Reganold
In
1971, then US Secretary of Agriculture Earl Butz uttered these
unsympathetic words: “Before we go back to organic agriculture in this
country, somebody must decide which 50 million Americans we are going to
let starve or go hungry.” Since then, critics have continued to argue
that organic agriculture is inefficient,
requiring more land than conventional agriculture to yield the same
amount of food. Proponents have countered that increasing research could
reduce the yield gap, and organic agriculture generates environmental,
health and socioeconomic benefits that can’t be found with conventional
farming.Organic agriculture occupies only 1% of global agricultural land,
making it a relatively untapped resource for one of the greatest
challenges facing humanity: producing enough food for a population that
could reach 10 billion by 2050, without the extensive deforestation and
harm to the wider environment. That’s the conclusion my doctoral student Jonathan Wachter and I
reached in reviewing 40 years of science and hundreds of scientific
studies comparing the long term prospects of organic and conventional farming.
The study, Organic Agriculture in the 21st Century, published in Nature
Plants, is the first to compare organic and conventional agriculture
across the four main metrics of sustainability
identified by the US National Academy of Sciences: be productive,
economically profitable, environmentally sound and socially just. Like a
chair, for a farm to be sustainable, it needs to be stable, with all
four legs being managed so they are in balance. We found that although organic farming systems produce yields that
average 10-20% less than conventional agriculture, they are more
profitable and environmentally friendly. Historically, conventional
agriculture has focused on increasing yields at the expense of the other
three sustainability metrics. The flower petals and the labels represent different sustainability
metrics that compare organic farming with conventional farming. They
illustrate that organic systems can better balance the four areas of
sustainability: production (orange), environment (blue), economics (red)
and social wellbeing (green). In addition, organic farming delivers equally or more nutritious
foods that contain less or no pesticide residues, and provide greater
social benefits than their conventional counterparts. With organic agriculture, environmental costs tend to be lower and the benefits greater.
Biodiversity loss, environmental degradation and severe impacts on
ecosystem services – which refer to nature’s support of wildlife
habitat, crop pollination, soil health and other benefits – have not
only accompanied conventional farming systems, but have often extended
well beyond the boundaries of their fields, such as fertilizer runoff
into rivers. Overall, organic farms tend to have better soil quality and reduce
soil erosion compared to their conventional counterparts. Organic
agriculture generally creates less soil and water pollution and lower
greenhouse gas emissions, and is more energy efficient. Organic
agriculture is also associated with greater biodiversity of plants,
animals, insects and microbes as well as genetic diversity. Despite lower yields, organic agriculture is more profitable (by
22–35%) for farmers because consumers are willing to pay more. These
higher prices essentially compensate farmers for preserving the quality
of their land. Studies that evaluate social equity and quality of life for farm communities are few. Still, organic farming has been shown to create more jobs and reduce farm workers’ exposure to pesticides and other chemicals. Organic farming can help to both feed the world and preserve wildland. In a study published this year, researchers modeled 500 food production scenarios
to see if we can feed an estimated world population of 9.6 billion
people in 2050 without expanding the area of farmland we already use.
They found that enough food could be produced with lower-yielding
organic farming, if people become vegetarians or eat a more plant-based
diet with lower meat consumption. The existing farmland can feed that
many people if they are all vegan, a 94% success rate if they are
vegetarian, 39% with a completely organic diet, and 15% with the
Western-style diet based on meat. Realistically, we can’t expect everyone to forgo meat. Organic isn’t
the only sustainable option to conventional farming either. Other viable
types of farming exist, such as integrated farming where you blend
organic with conventional practices or grass-fed livestock systems.More than 40 years after Earl Butz’s comment, we are in a new era of
agriculture.During this period, the number of organic farms, the extent
of organically farmed land, the amount of research funding devoted to
organic farming and the market size for organic foods have steadily
increased. Sales of organic foods and beverages
are rapidly growing in the world, increasing almost fivefold between
1999 and 2013 to $72bn. This 2013 figure is projected to double by 2018.
Closer to home, organic food and beverage sales in 2015 represented
almost 5% of US food and beverage sales, up from 0.8% in 1997. Scaling up organic agriculture with appropriate public policies and
private investment is an important step for global food and ecosystem
security. The challenge facing policymakers is to develop government
policies that support conventional farmers converting to organic
systems. For the private business sector, investing in organics offers a lot of entrepreneurial opportunities and is an area of budding growth that will likely continue for years to come. In a time of increasing population growth, climate change and
environmental degradation, we need agricultural systems that come with a
more balanced portfolio of sustainability benefits. Organic farming is
one of the healthiest and strongest sectors in agriculture today and
will continue to grow and play a larger part in feeding the world. It
produces adequate yields and better unites human health, environment and
socioeconomic objectives than conventional farming.
No comments:
Post a Comment