Organic
produce harvested from small, diverse farms may be fine and good for
anyone who can afford to pay $3 or more per pound for tomatoes. But to
the hungry masses of the developing world? What’s the
heirloom-tomato-and-baby-lettuce model going to do for them? Sating that
kind of hunger will take acre after acre packed with staple crops like
rice and corn, grown with the aid of whatever chemicals and technology
can optimize yields—at least that’s what many think.
A new report published last week by the
United Nations Conference for Trade and Development
suggests a far different approach, however, one that has more in common
with the style of agriculture that produces your favorite tomatoes than
a 1,000-acre
field of corn in the Midwest . And it might not only be able to feed the world—the authors says it can help mitigate climate change too.
The report is exhaustive, with six full pages dedicated to listing
the different acronyms referenced throughout the 321-page document.
Topics range from the benefits of locally developed plant varities, to
carbon sequestration as social justice, and democratizing access to
seeds and other products. Full of sometimes dense, academic writing, it
isn’t exactly something you’d want to curl up on the couch with. But the
title—
“Wake Up Before It Is Too Late: Make Agriculture Truly Sustainable Now for Food Security in a Changing Climate” —comes through like a shout.
The document makes a lengthy case for organic, low-input, small-scale
agriculture as the best means for not only feeding the world, but for
also managing the stresses of drought, rain and other catastrophic
weather brought on by climate change. It’s not a new idea, nor does the
U.N. explicitly endorse it—you won’t hear Ban Ki-moon talking about it
at the General Assembly this week. But even if the report carries no
weight beyond its rhetorical value (the U.N. isn’t making any policy
recommendations by publishing it), having the organization’s logo, that
top-down view of the globe, stamped on the cover still carries
significance.
In the chapter “Strengthening Resilience of Farming Systems: A Prerequisite of Sustainable Agricultural Production,”
Miguel Altieri
and Parviz Koohafkan offer a lay thesis for the report, one that’s less
confrontational than the title. Describing the importance of the
various forms of traditional agriculture found around the world, the
pair write, “They tell a fascinating story of the ability and ingenuity
of humans to adjust and adapt to the vagaries of a changing physical and
material environment from generation to generation.”
The approach they and their co-authors advocate for is based on that
history of adaptation. “Whether recognized or not by the scientific
community, this ancestral knowledge constitutes the foundation for
actual and future agricultural innovations and technologies,” the pair
concludes. That’s a very different proscription for the future of
agriculture—which will soon be taxed with feeding eight billion
mouths—than is often put forward. Last year, for example, the Director
of National Intelligence’s
Global Trend Report for 2030
singled out biotechnology as the most promising means of managing
increased demand and resources diminished by climate change. The report
says that GMOs, “hold the most promise for achieving food security in
the next 15-20 years.”
“What people are realizing is, first of all, industrial agriculture
is not feeding the world,” Altieri, Professor of Agroecology at UC
Berkley, said in a phone interview. “Most of what it produces is
biomass, which is for cattle, biotech crops, and biofuels.”
What he wants to see instead is an approach to agriculture that does
acknowledge the “ancestral knowledge” he writes about, whether it takes
the form of drought-tolerant varieties of grains that have been selected
over generations or learning more about agroecological (that’s what
they call sustainable agriculture in the academy) systems’ abilities to
cope with and rebound from catastrophic weather events like hurricanes.
“What we are trying to come up with is a western scientific approach,
and people who have been farming for centuries have developed their own
ethnosciences and we need to learn from them,” he says. “That’s going
to be what helps us in the future.”
“Wake Up Before It Is Too Late” may be passively critical of GMOs,
but it directly indicts the Green Revolution, the approach to
agriculture championed by Norman Borlaug. In the 1960s, the Nobel
Laureate agronomist helped transition farming in Latin America and Asia
to modern hybrid wheat and rice varieties grown with the assistance of
irrigation and synthetic fertilizers and pesticides. “The world needs a
paradigm shift in agricultural development: from a ‘green revolution’ to
a ‘ecological intensification’ approach,” read the UNCTAD report’s “Key
Messages.”
Borlaug, who also advocated for GMOs in the years before his death,
in 2009, saw organic farming and criticisms of the Green Revolution as
being diametrically opposed to feeding people the world over.
“Some elements of popular culture romanticize older, inefficient
production methods and shun fertilizers and pesticides,” he wrote for
the
Wall Street Journal
in 2009. “People should be able to purchase organic food if they have
the will and financial means to do so, but not at the expense of the
world’s hungry—25,000 of whom die each day from malnutrition.”
The Borlag Institute for International Agriculture declined to comment on the UNCTAD report.
The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation is working to continue Borlag’s
approach, but with an eye toward sustainability, and biotechnology—not
just hybrid varieties—as the key tool in what some call a second Green
Revolution. Addressing the debate over genetic engineering’s role in
global agriculture (and not the report in particular), the Foundation’s
communications officer Amy Enright wrote in an email, “Essentially, the
foundation believes that people in the developing world should have the
same access to innovation that benefits the rich world, and we believe
that GM crops have the potential to provide benefits to farmers in the
poorest parts of the world .”
“Advances in agriculture, just like in medicine, must be guided by
regulations to ensure new products (seeds, vaccines or medicines) are
safe and effective,” she adds. “We work with many partners across both
the public and private sectors to ensure that farmers will have access
to seeds that are affordable—so ultimately the farmer can choose what
seed or technology is right for them.”
Despite Gates’ clout and cash and the legacy of the Green Revolution, Ben Lilliston of the
Institute of Agriculture and Trade Policy
gets the sense that the conversation is changing. “I’m optimistic that
there is a shift taking place at the global level in the institutions
and in the sort of larger dialog,” he says, referencing other reports
from U.N. groups that advocate for sustainable approaches to
agriculture.
But Lilliston admits that even if there’s a sense that he and
like-minded people and institutions increasingly feel like they’re
winning the argument, until ag policy and practice follow suit, it’s all
academic. “When it come to global changes that are more concrete,” he
says, “we haven’t really got there yet.”
Altieri agrees, saying documents like this, “give credibility to the
approach, and it has an impact in academia. But it doesn’t change many
things. At the end of the day, the debate isn’t scientific—it’s
political.” According to him, reports like “Wake Up Before It Is Too
Late,” “strengthens the social movements that are going to put the
change on the politics.”
Pointing to the debate over Golden Rice trials in the Philippines and
protests against GMO crops in India, Peru and parts of Africa,
Lilliston believes that those social movements are already being
empowered. “All of that is a sort of push back and resistance to the
Green Revolution, chemical approach—and monoculture approach—to
producing food.”
Link:
takepart.com/article/2013/09/23/un-report-says-organic-sustainable-agriculture-key-feeding-world .
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