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A local farmer with a harvest of huana, drought- and frost-resistant potatoes. (Photo: Cynthia Graber)

Ancient Andean crops and farming methods are revived as Peruvians struggle to deal with the effects of climate change.


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Story from PRI's The World. Listen to audio above for full report.

To get to some of Peru's most remote Andean communities, you head out over pockmarked dirt roads from a small town already 10,000 feet up. Up – up – up — past llamas and alpacas and sheep and cows. The vegetation thins out and the air becomes even thinner. Your lungs clamor for oxygen and you're offered coca leaves to help adjust to the altitude.

And then, after four hypnotic hours, you've arrived – at a patch of sparse farmland near the town of Pomacocha, at 13,000 feet an outpost at pretty much the upper limits of agriculture.

For centuries, Pomacocha's thousand or so residents have grown corn in the fertile valleys below the town and potatoes on slopes that push against the sky above, fed by seasonal rains and glacial streams.

But climate change is hitting the high Andes hard. Temperature and precipitation swings are becoming more extreme, the glaciers are shrinking fast, and a tough place to farm is becoming even tougher.

So to help them deal with an uncertain future, residents are looking back in time—to before the arrival of Europeans.

From a field of brown soil, Pomacocha resident Mariano Ccaccya unearths a small, pink potato—a huaña, one of the first to be grown here in decades. The huaña is the native potato in this part of Peru, but Ccaccya says it had fallen out of favor in recent decades and was about to disappear.

Huaña are bitter, Ccaccya says, and it takes a lot of work to make them palatable. But he says there are good reasons to grow them in times of increasing uncertainty.

Ccaccya, who's the local head of a nonprofit group that's leading an effort to revive ancient Andean crops, says huañas can be stored for two or three years, more than four times as long as most other potatoes. Ccaccya's colleague Adripino Jayo says huañas also resist frost, hail, extreme rain and drought.

"It's very, very strong," Jayo says. "Now that we're in the crisis of climate change, it's worth recovering these potatoes."

Others think so too. Jayo and Ccaccya's organization, Cusichaca Andina, recently won a grant from the World Bank to further its efforts to promote a variety of resilient ancient Andean crops, including quinoa, amaranth, and different types of potatoes and squashes.

But changing what's grown here is only part of the plan. Cusichaca Andina is also looking to the past to try to change how crops are grown.

On a steep slope in a valley about two hours from the potato fields, Jayo pulls away a stand of brush to reveal an overgrown rock wall. He says the stones are part of a long-abandoned system of agricultural terraces, built into Peru's mountains by the Incas more than 500 years ago.

Terraces like these once blanketed thousands of square miles of the Andes, and were described in the 17th century book The Royal Commentaries of the Incas, by Garcilaso de la Vega.

"They built level terraces on the mountains and hillsides, wherever the soil was good," De la Vega wrote. "And these are to be seen today in Cusco and in the whole of Peru."

Just a small fraction of the terraces are still used today. After the European conquest, Spanish crops and agricultural systems largely displaced traditional ones.

But here in Pomacocha, old terraces are being restored, and new ones are being built.

Ccaccya says they have a lot of benefits. The terraces help channel water for irrigation while avoiding erosion. They can hold water for months, which is crucial in a place with only intermittent access to water. And plants grown on them are more productive, he says.

Cusichaca Andina is also working on reviving another ancient technology for holding and transporting scarce water—Incan irrigation systems that Garcilaso de la Vega called "extraordinary."

"The Cisterns, or Conservatories, were about twelve foot deep, in channels made of hewn stone," de la Vega wrote, "and rammed in with earth so hard, that no water could pass between… But the Spaniards little regarded the convenience of these works, but rather out of a scornful and disdaining humor, have suffered them unto ruin, beyond all recovery."

Centuries later, the digging and hammering of a handful of men near Pomacocha suggests that the ruin of the Incan irrigation channels was perhaps not quite beyond all recovery. The workers are chiseling and lining up stones along a long-abandoned canal once used to divert water from a nearby spring.

"It's always been here," Jayo says, pointing at the stone canal. "It's probably from pre-Incan times, but it's still useful for irrigation, with a little help."

Cusichaca Andina and other groups in the Andes have recovered these and other ancient agricultural treasures through a combination of archaeology and exploring local traditions. And they're teaching communities throughout the Peruvian high Andes how to rebuild and use them, along with other ancient agricultural techniques.

It's all part of an effort to increase the resilience and food security.

But the leaders of Cusichaca Andina realize they can only make a small dent in a vast need. Jayo says the Peruvian government has a big role to play as well.

"We see the difficulties in the national context," Jayo says. He says the group wants politicians in Lima to apply what it's doing across all of the Andes.

So far national politicians haven't picked up that slack.

But the work here may have relevance to mountainous regions beyond Peru. For instance Cusichaca Andina's founder, British archaeologist Ann Kendall, recently traveled to China. The world's largest country faces huge challenges from climate change and water shortages. And it also happens to have its own system of ancient mountain terraces that Kendall thinks may just be waiting to be revived.

Read the rest of this story and view a slideshow of Pomacocha farmers on The World website.

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PRI's "The World" is a one-hour, weekday radio news magazine offering a mix of news, features, interviews, and music from around the globe. "The World" is a co-production of the BBC World Service, PRI and WGBH Boston. More about The World.


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Chagford is about as lovely a village as you could ever hope to find. It's almost absurdly picturesque with its ancient stone buildings and village green bounded by fields and streams and the wild, dark hills of Dartmoor looming overhead. It's hard to imagine how it could be any lovelier. And then Samson comes clip-clopping down the road pulling a cart loaded with freshly picked organic produce.

Honestly. It's so ridiculously bucolic that I expect Miss Marple to come flying around the corner on a bicycle. What's more, walking down the road, at Samson's side, with his owner, Ed Hamer, I have a small taste of what life must be like as a supermodel. People slow down. They smile. They wave. They seem genuinely delighted to see me, or at least Samson. Everybody loves Samson, a handsome four-year-old Welsh cob cross Dartmoor pony. Ed grew up in Chagford and so although the route from his field to our destination is only a mile, we have to stop for half a dozen conversations and for Samson to have his nose repeatedly petted.

"Samson is our secret weapon," says Hamer. "When we first started out two years ago, we only had 10 subscribers, but that doubled overnight the first time we took him on the delivery run. Everybody just wanted to know what we were doing."

What Hamer and his fellow farmer, Chinnie Kingsbury, are doing is a "Community Supported Agriculture" project called Chagfood. It's a vegetable box scheme that aims to grow and deliver seasonal food within the community, for the community. Members pay £290 a year, upfront, to become shareholders, which equates to one box of veg a week. The idea is that, by paying upfront, they share in both the rewards and the risks offarming: if there's a glut of carrots one week, there will be extra in the box. And if they can't get anything out of the ground because of a hard frost, as has happened for the last two winters, there may not be anything at all unless they come down to help. As well as Chagford, Ed has customers in nearby Lustleigh and Drewsteignton.



Samson from Banyak Films on Vimeo.




On a Thursday morning, box-packing day, there's a collection of volunteers cutting chard, and weighing salad leaves and heaping flowers into rustic bunches, a vision of natural bounty that's merely underlined by the small babies crawling around (one of them Ed and Yssy's six-month-old, Jude). Some of the volunteers are shareholders and some just come "because it's a lovely place to hang out". After tea and cake, the produce is packed into handmade wooden boxes and loaded on to the cart. Samson is haltered, and I set off with Ed to the drop-off point in the village from where the subscribers will come to collect them.

My suspicion was that Samson's real purpose was to give the project a rural cute factor, but this was before I met Ed and realised that this isn't some whimsical hobby, it's part of a greater philosophical framework. He's a boyish 29 years old, and might not look like much of a revolutionary, hanging out, growing cabbage and onions in a field in Devon, but he's a proper ideologue. on the one hand, Chagfood is about providing local, sustainable, seasonable produce, but it's also part of his wider mission: extending land rights for all.

As well as the market garden in Chagford, which he set up with his wife Yssy, and Chinnie, he's also the co-editor of the Land, "An Occasional Magazine About Land Rights" founded by the veteran land campaigner Simon Fairlie. It's a handsome publication, with specially commissioned woodcuts in place of photos.

"Rome fell; the Soviet Empire collapsed; the stars and stripes are fading in the west," reads the manifesto. "Nothing is forever in history, except geography. Capitalism is a confidence trick, a dazzling edifice built on paper promises. It may stand longer than some of us anticipate, but when it crumbles, the land will remain."

The magazine and the movement behind it are explicitly inspired by the Levellers and the Diggers, the 17th-century rural rebels who led the fight against Enclosure, and it's not a coincidence that Land is a print rather than a digital publication – Luddism also looms large – and is "written by and for people who believe that the roots of justice, freedom, social security and democracy lie not so much in access to money, or to the ballot box, as in access to land and its resources."

If this sounds slightly dry, the reality is anything but. Hamer grew up in Chagford "and I wanted to remain in the area but there's no way I could afford to buy here". His parents are teachers, who were lured to Devon in the 70s after graduating from art school in London, and he worked on farms as a teenager learning hedge laying and coppicing and everything else. But in Devon, as elsewhere, smallholdings are now so expensive they're bought by downsizing bankers rather than young would-be farmers (Chagford even boasts its own celebrity residents: Jennifer Saunders and Adrian Edmondson) and what this means is that the likes of Ed and his classmates are struggling to find a way to stay in the place they grew up in.

"As a teenager I was working for people who'd bought their farms in the 60s and 70s on a mortgage and then paid back the mortgage themselves through hard work and determination. Whereas in the last 10 to 15 years that's become completely out of our reach."

Even the smallest smallholding now fetches half a million pounds and not only does it prevent local people from staying in the area, it also means swaths of land now lie empty and unproductive. one of the things that makes me angriest is people coming down here and buying the land and then sticking a couple of ponies on it. Farmland standing idle is one of the biggest crimes we've got when we're importing 40% of our food.

"There are so many things that local authorities could do. In France, neighbours get first refusal on the land. And you can't buy farmland unless you are going to farm it. Which to me is very easy to implement but it isn't, largely because the Conservative party have no interest in alienating the landowners who vote them in."

Which is where Chagfood comes in. It's just two rented fields: Samson lives on one, the other is ploughed and planted. And one of the purposes of it is to prove that it is possible to make a living from the land in a low-tech, sustainable way. "We've had to use our initiative because we've had no other choice, but we're trying to prove a three-acre plot can support two full-time farmers." Two years ago, a thinktank, the New Economics Foundation came to Chagford and organised a meeting with farmers and residents and the landless young like Ed, and one of the things that came out of this was that people wanted locally grown produce so I put my hand up and took it on," says Ed. They managed to swing a grant from the lottery which started them off, and he and Chinnie are being paid for two and a half days a week "and working at least five" but they're hoping to be financially self-sufficient from next spring. "We need to get 60 subscribers and if we don't we'll still do it. We'll just be paid less."

And Samson is a key part of his philosophy. "We do 90% of the cultivation and tillage with the horse." It was while working as a journalist for the Ecologist magazine that Ed first got interested in horse farming: "I learned about peak oil, and how we are dependent on oil for our farming. And also about how traditional skills are dying out. If our generation doesn't learn them, then that's it, they're gone forever, so that was a key thing for me. And thirdly, using a horse improves the health of our soil."

Having established that he wanted to farm with horses, he persuaded one of the few horse farmers in Britain to take him on as an apprentice for a year, and then bought Samson and broke him in. But then Ed is nothing but dogged. There's a beautiful wooden gypsy caravan in the corner of the field that he built after he finished university in Bangor, where he studied agroforestry, and that he parked in his parents' garden and lived in with Yssy while doing his apprenticeship.

Although he speaks at speed about land rights, and sustainability, he not only talks the talk, but also walks the walk. He's one of the founders of an international movement called Reclaim the Fields which is attempting to organise young people across Europe to lobby for greater access to the land, and build a network of like-minded farmers across the continent (a recent meeting in London attracted 500 people). I'm determined to find some sort of label for him, though. Are you a neo-peasant, I ask him? A Nouveau Leveller?

"I'm a young farmer," he says. Doesn't that imply you spend your time getting pissed on cider at the hunt ball? "That's part of what we want to address: the stereotypes of young farmers being Tory boys only interested in fox hunting and chemical farming." But he does admit that if he's not precisely a neo-peasant, his lifestyle is certainly "peasant-like".

"In the sense that peasants get used to a low standard of living. It's possible to stay in the community you grew up in but you're going to have to spend less, go on holiday less, have less money. But it's an incredibly good quality of life. Look at all this!" and he waves his hand at the field full of produce and the hills beyond. "I would argue that the quality of life justifies earning less money. To be able to come here and work with my horse, that for me is worth much more than getting a job in a city and earning 30 or 40 grand."

And then he untethers Samson and takes him back to his field while I wander off to examine his gypsy caravan. I thought I'd continue the interview afterwards, but when I return, Ed is already down the far end of the field, digging mildewed onions out of the ground, doggedly walking the walk.

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Small farms are the key to global food security in the 21st century, the UN has announced. This information was included in UN’s recent food and agriculture report/book, Save and Grow, which I wrote about in June. But the UN has made it an even more front-and-center issue by announcing today (with the release of the UN’s annual World Economic and Social Survey) that governments need to help shift our agricultural focus to small-scale farming on order to avoid massive food security issues.



Intensive Agriculture Threatening Future Food Supply


Currently, the world relies heavily on large-scale intensive farming practices. But these agricultural practices are threatening the environment and agricultural sustainability, and with a growing global population they are completely inadequate.

A much more effective and sustainable approach is to help small farmers in more diverse locations succeed using ecological farming practices.

“The main challenge is to improve incentives so that they promote and lead to the development of sustainable agriculture by small farm holders,” said the survey, which is actually a product of economists in the UN’s Department of Economic and Social Affairs.





World Population Growing, Food Needs Growing, Current Policies Leading Us in Wrong Direction


The world population is expected to grow 35% by 2050 and food production needs to grow 70-100% in that same time period to satisfy the world’s food needs.

The policies needed, as noted above, are completely different from policies in place today.

“Evidence has shown that for most crops the optimal farm is small in scale and that it is at this level that most gain in terms of both sustainable productivity increases and rural poverty reduction can be achieved.”

However, larger farms currently have more access to government grants and credits, and larger farms have more resources and can push smaller farms out of the market.

Quality needs to get more support; long-term costs and sustainability need to be taken into account more. Can we live up to the task at hand?



Source: Eat Drink Better (http://s.tt/12MRH)


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"The present paradigm of intensive crop production cannot meet the challenges of the new millennium," says a new report from the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).

In other words: Big Ag, step aside. It's not as if the world is being fed particularly well at the moment -- and prospects are dimming for chemical agriculture in a resource-restricted, warming world.

The FAO has been very active in attempts to make world agriculture more sustainable. It published an influential 2006 report on animal agriculture's environmental and climate impact, and it was behind the 2008 International Assessment of Agricultural Science and Technology for Development report, which laid out a vision of the future of agriculture in the developing world based on the principles of agro-ecology rather than on chemically intensive industrial agriculture.

Building on that work, the FAO has now published a "policymaker's guide" for developing-world agriculture called "Save and Grow" that begins like this:

The Green Revolution in agriculture, which swept much of the developing world during the 1960s, saved an estimated one billion people from famine. Thanks to high-yielding crop varieties, irrigation, agrochemicals and modern management techniques, farmers in developing countries increased food production from 800 million tonnes to more than 2.2 billion tonnes between 1961 and 2000. Intensive crop production helped to reduce the number of undernourished, drive rural development and prevent the destruction of natural ecosystems to make way for extensive farming. Those achievements came at a cost. In many countries, decades of intensive cropping have degraded fertile land and depleted groundwater, provoked pest upsurges, eroded biodiversity, and polluted air, soil and water. As the world population rises to a projected 9.2 billion in 2050, we have no option but to further intensify crop production. But the yield growth rate of major cereals is declining, and farmers face a series of unprecedented, intersecting challenges: increasing competition for land and water, rising fuel and fertilizer prices, and the impact of climate change.

The new agricultural paradigm, according to the FAO, should be "save and grow." Farmers must preserve the natural resources at their disposal in order to increase their productivity. Reduced tillage to save soil, crop rotations to save nutrients, and improved seeds to save water. Note that for the last decade, "improved seeds" typically meant genetically modified seeds -- but as a recent New York Times article on food production indicated, many of the newest, best seeds for our warming world have been developed using traditional breeding techniques.

Of course, Big Ag does not tend to take this sort of thing sitting down. In a case of dueling policy papers, the industry-backed Global Harvest Initiative (GHI) has put out its own set of guidelines for the future of ag. GHI is a coalition of biotech and agribusiness companies -- DuPont, John Deere, Archer Daniels Midland, and Monsanto -- that has, amazingly, teamed up with three big environmental groups -- The Nature Conservancy, the World Wildlife Fund, and Conservation International. GHI intends to fight against the agro-ecological techniques recommended by the FAO; it seems to think the FAO's approach is anti-technological. As the group puts it darkly in its policy brief:

Societies must carefully examine the application of technology in agriculture to avoid stifling the innovation and investment necessary to develop and promote sustainable agriculture ...

Today, it is unfortunate that approval processes are becoming more restrictive and burdensome as court challenges mount based on non-scientific concerns.

This seems to be a reference to several U.S. court cases currently putting the legal brakes on the use of some GMO crops sold by one of GHI's main funders, Monsanto -- though the courts have clearly established that opposition to technological advances can indeed be science-based.

GHI's main point is that technology is the only answer to feeding the world. Every attempt GHI makes at an evenhanded approach, such as admitting that "the application of new science-based technologies and innovations is but one tool available to help meet the growing demand for food and agriculture worldwide," is undercut by the group's conclusion:

Successfully addressing today's global agricultural challenges, as well as those of the future, requires applying new technologies and innovation at every step of the way, from the beginning to the end of the global agricultural supply chain.

As you dig through the dueling policy prescriptions, you quickly realize that the FAO's "Save and Grow" provides a real handbook for developing a successful agricultural system based mostly (but not entirely) on knowledge we posses today. GHI, however, wants us to believe that the answers we need are beyond the knowledge of today's farmers and scientists. one group is presenting a fantasy based on promises and "just around the corner" success; the other is dealing with reality and what can be accomplished with materials and know-how we already have.

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The size of the world’s forests is declining every year and yet, at the same time, the number of trees on farms is increasing. Over a billion hectares of agricultural land, almost half of the world’s farmland, have more than 10 percent of their area occupied by trees. Over 160 million hectares have more than 50 percent tree cover. Agroforestry, mixing trees with agriculture, is a crucial bridge between forestry and agriculture. Growing trees on farms can provide farmers with food, income, fodder and medicines, as well providing environmental benefits such as enriching the soil, retaining water, fixing carbon and generating biomass.



Capturing carbon and cutting the emissions of greenhouse gases. Photo: ICRAF

Over the next two decades, the world’s population is expected to grow by an average of more than 100 million people a year. More than 95 percent of that increase will occur in developing countries, where pressures on land and water are already intense. A key challenge facing the international community, as well as local institutions and farming communities is, therefore, to ensure food security for present and future generations, while protecting the natural resource base on which they depend. Trees on farms will be an important element in meeting those challenges.

Farmers in many parts of the world are enthusiastically incorporating trees into their landscapes as the benefits of doing so become clear. Data from the Food and Agriculture Organization show that the number of trees on farms is increasing, even as the amount of forests is decreasing. In some regions, such as Southeast Asia and in Central America, tree cover on agricultural lands now exceeds 30%.

Multiple benefits from working trees

Agroforestry focuses on the wide range of useful trees that can be grown on farms and in rural landscapes. These include “fertilizer trees” for land regeneration, soil health and food security; fruit trees for nutrition; fodder trees that improve the production of smallholders’ livestock; timber and fuel wood trees for shelter and energy; medicinal trees that combat disease; and trees that produce gums, resins or latex products. Many of these trees are multipurpose, providing a range of benefits.

Agroforestry provides many livelihood and environmental benefits, increasing the assets of poor households with farm-grown trees, enhancing soil fertility and livestock productivity on farms, and linking poor households to markets for high-value fruits, oils, cash crops and medicines. Domesticating wild fruit trees, such as the African plum (Dacryodes edulis) and the bush mango (Irvingia gabonensis), using simple, sustainable technologies like nurseries, soil fertility management and domestication programmes, has allowed smallholder farmers in Cameroon to increase their earnings fivefold. Similarly, a massive communal move to plant poplar trees in irrigated wheat and barley fields in northwest India now supplies 50 percent of the country’s pulp and paper industry. Both cases show the importance of a group effort, in the same way as Jeff Follett’s article from Brazil.

Policy, land rights and ownership of trees

Yet, the contribution that trees can make on farms is strongly influenced by governance institutions, policies and rights. Trees are a long-term crop and farmers need to have secure tenure to their land before they will invest valuable time and resources in growing or nursing trees. They also need rights over the trees themselves. Changes to policies in Kenya that gave farmers ownership of trees on their land have stimulated large new investments in tree planting and care. This example is discussed by Sudhirendar Sharma on page 18. For agroforestry to thrive, what is needed is an intensification of the trend to devolve land and forest tenures to local people and complete the transition from exclusion to ownership. Obstacles such as the gap between forest and agricultural policies, a lack of capacity and underinvestment have hindered the widespread adoption of agroforestry.

Sequestering carbon

The United Nations declared 2011 as the International Year of Forests, emphasising the role of forests in the climate change agenda and building on several years of policy progress for Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and forest Degradation (REDD+). Agriculture can reduce emissions, but so can trees in agricultural landscapes. Agroforestry blurs the agriculture-forest divide. However, climate change policies and emerging institutions perpetuate this divide, creating separate rules and incentives to govern each sector. This hinders the potential of agroforestry to play its full role as a major part of the solution to climate change.

Taking the results of a large number of studies (see http://tinyurl.com/6957366), we can confidently say that a tropical tree sequesters at least 22.6 kg of carbon from the atmosphere each year and in many cases much more. Most of the deforestation in Africa, and in parts of Asia, is caused by agricultural expansion, largely by smallholder farmers. Agroforestry can curb emissions of greenhouse gases by slowing the conversion of forest to farm land and holding carbon in the trees on the farms. Developing smallholder agroforestry on land that is not classified as forest could capture 30-40 percent of the emissions related to land-use change.

The long-term perspective

A long-term perspective is essential to meet the future challenges that increasing population will bring, especially that of increasing food supply from a diminishing area of available land. In the longer term, the emerging Evergreen Agriculture movement, which looks to reinvent agriculture trees in a radical, but entirely practical, way, is a vision of a future in which many food crops will be grown under a full canopy of trees. Evergreen Agriculture is doubling and tripling cereal crop yields in many parts of the African continent. The indigenous nitrogen-fixing tree Faidherbia or Acacia albida is increasing unfertilised maize yields in Malawi, Zambia, Tanzania, Ethiopia and in numerous other countries. They are now being grown on over 5 million hectares of crop land throughout Niger.

The value of trees outside (as well as within) forests needs to be recognised by all involved in agricultural production, planning and policy development. Greater investment is needed in giving farmers land rights and ownership of the trees that they nurture and in supporting smallholder farmers to adopt agroforestry practices. Such support needs to include access to inputs, sector development of tree planting materials, information and training and access to credit – so that farmers can improve their incomes and ensure food security while also providing environmental benefits. Innovative approaches are urgently needed which balance environment and development needs. In between forest and agriculture, and complementing them both, agroforestry is one of mankind’s best hopes to create a climate-smart agriculture, increase food security, alleviate rural poverty, and achieve truly sustainable development. This, in turn, will help ensure that our world’s forests can be conserved far into the future.

Text: Dennis Garrity and Paul Stapleton

Dennis Garrity is the Director General of the World Agroforestry Centre in Nairobi, Kenya, and Paul Stapleton is the Head of Communications. 


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Back in March, USDA secretary Tom Vilsack spoke at an event called the Commodity Classic in Tampa, Fla. Sponsored by agribusiness giants Monsanto, BASF, John Deere, Dow AgroSciences, Dupont, Syngenta, and Archer Daniels Midland, among others, the event hails itself as the "premier national trade show and convention for corn, soy, wheat, and sorghum farmers."

According to an account in the trade journalAgri-Pulse, Vilsack spoke "with sometimes evangelistic fervor." He thundered against critics of corn-based ethanol, reiterated the Obama administration's goal of doubling U.S. farm exports by 2014 by ramming open foreign markets, and praised the assembled farmers and agribusiness flacks for their record of "ensuring affordable food for U.S. families," Agri-Pulse reported. The former governor of Iowa ended his speech on an even more flattering note: "The farmers in this room have provided the prescription that this nation must follow to get itself back totally on its feet ... You should never ever bet against the American farmer because if you do, it's a losing bet." The audience roared its approval.

The ag secretary was essentially promoting an agribusiness-as-usual vision of farm policy: maximum production of a few commodity crops, mainly to be used to fatten confined animals, create cheap sweeteners and fats, and fill gas tanks. He did so amid much rhetoric about "jobs," the Agri-Pulseaccount shows. But that's ludicrous. The modern food system lionized by Vilsack has been amassive net destroyer of jobs. And the fixation on doubling U.S. ag exports can't be good news for farmers in the global south, who struggle to compete with their highly capitalized U.S. peers.

Meanwhile, U.S. ag policy as expressed by Vilsack is putting us increasingly at odds with an emerging global consensus on how to structure food production in an era of climate change, resource scarcity, and population growth. As I wrote last week, for years now, development specialists and ag scientists associated with the U.N. and even the World Bank have been questioning the assumption that only chemical-intensive consumption of a few commodities can "feed the world" going forward. The latest data point: the U.N.'s Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) has come out with a policy blueprint called "Save and grow: A policymaker’s guide to the sustainable intensification of smallholder crop production." Its central premise reads like a direct rebuke to Vilsack: "The present paradigm of intensive crop production cannot meet the challenges of the new millennium."

The report acknowledges that the advent of pesticides, mined and synthetic fertilizers, and monocrops represented a "paradigm shift in traditional agriculture" that led to higher crop yields in the short term. But then it pushes for "another paradigm shift," to what it calls "sustainable crop production intensification, which seeks to increase food production without eroding the long-term productivity of farms and their surrounding ecosystems. It promotes farming practices that won't be popular with the agribusiness giants that funded the Commodity Classic: things like minimizing fertilizer use and increasing soil organic matter by planting nitrogen-fixing cover crops; and using a broad variety of plants and animals in conjunction, rather than each farm specializing in massive quantities of one or two crops.

According to the report, such approaches have been proven to work:

A review of agricultural development projects in 57 low-income countries found that more efficient use of water, reduced use of pesticides and improvements in soil health had led to average crop yield increases of 79 percent. Another study concluded that agricultural systems that conserve ecosystem services by using practices such as conservation tillage, crop diversification, legume intensification and biological pest control, perform as well as intensive, high-input systems.

But such systems don't appear by magic, the FAO stresses. Intensifying agriculture sustainably will require policy reform at the global and national levels.

Meanwhile, an agribusiness-funded backlash against FAO's policy agenda has been launched, Tom Laskawy reports. A project called Global Harvest Initiative -- backed by DuPont, John Deere, Archer Daniels Midland, and Monsanto, in conjunction with Big Green groups the Nature Conservancy, the World Wildlife Fund, and Conservation International -- has released its own policy brief, subtly titled "Embracing Science-Based Solutions." The main problem facing global food production, the report suggests, is "resistance to adopting new technologies" in the global south. The solution is simple: the creation of "rule-based and predictable regulatory systems" that can "bring technology forward and foster innovation." In other words, resistance to the industry's products must be brought to heel.

In Vilsack's Commodity Classic speech, he hewed close to the industry party line, defying the emerging consensus exemplified by the latest FAO report. Taken as a whole, the Obama administration's ag policy has from the start been wildly inconsistant, sometimes veering in the direction of progressive change, other times lurching back toward the agrichemical status quo. Meanwhile, the U.S. style of input-intensive commodity agriculture has succeeded in creating mountains of cheap food, but has has given rise to a massive crisis in diet-related disease,contributes mightily to climate change [PDF], and routinely trashes the ecosytems it touches. In short, it's a system badly in need of reform, not one that needs be exported to other nations.

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As people move from rural to urban settings in search of economic opportunities, urban agriculture is becoming an important provider of both food and employment, according to researchers with theWorldwatch Institute. “Urban agriculture is providing food, jobs, and hope in Nairobi, Kampala, Dakar, and other cities across sub-Saharan Africa,” said Danielle Nierenberg, co-director of the Institute’s Nourishing the Planet project. “In some cases, urban farmers are providing important inputs, such as seed, to rural farmers, dispelling the myth that urban agriculture helps feed the poor and hungry only in cities.”



As the population in cities grows, urban farms might be a solution to improve food security for urban areas. (Photo credit: Bernard Pollack)

The United Nations projects that up to 65 percentof the world’s population will live in cities by 2050, up from around 50 percent today. The rate of urban migration is particularly high in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia, where inadequate urban infrastructure struggles to keep up with the large influx of people. “Although most of the world’s poor and hungry remain in rural areas, hunger is migrating with people into urban areas,” said Brian Halweil, co-director of the Nourishing the Planet project.

Currently, an estimated 800 million people worldwide are engaged in urban agriculture, producing 15–20 percent of the world’s food. However, this activity occurs mainly in Asia, making it critical to place more worldwide emphasis on this vital sector. In Africa, 14 million people migrate from rural to urban areas each year, and studies suggest that an estimated 35–40 million Africans living in cities will need to depend on urban agriculture to meet their food requirements in the future.

“Urban agriculture is an important aspect of the development movement as it has the potential to address some of our most pressing challenges, including food insecurity, income generation, waste disposal, gender inequality, and urban insecurity“ said Nancy Karanja, a Professor at the University of Nairobi, Kenya, and a State of the World 2011 contributing author.

Organizations such as Urban Harvest and others are working across the African continent to enhance urban agricultural efforts. In sub-Saharan Africa, the Educational Concerns for Hunger Organization (ECHO), a Florida-based organization, has helped farmers build gardens using old tires and other “trash” to create plant beds. And the group Harvest of Hope has helped organize urban Community Supported Agriculture(CSA) programs in Cape Town, South Africa, purchasing excess produce from city gardens and redistributing it in schools in the area.

These projects are not only helping to provide fresh sources of food for city dwellers, but also providing a source of income, a tool to empower women, and a means of protecting the environment, among other benefits.

According to Nourishing the Planet, urban agriculture provides three important advantages that are evident in successful projects across the African continent:

  • Close to home (and market). Produce from urban farms and gardens does not need to travel as far as produce grown in rural areas to reach the dining table, which helps to reduce production costs, post-harvest waste, and greenhouse gas emissions. This is also helpful in situations when supply chains from rural areas have been interrupted and cities are unable to receive food imports.
  • Empowering women and building communities. In Kibera, the largest slum in Nairobi, Kenya, Urban Harvest has helped women build “vertical farms” simply by using sacks of soil in which to grow vegetables. Using these gardening activities, the women share business ideas and technical know-how, empowering each other. The community gardens also act as a forum where community members can exchange ideas and discuss community issues and problems.
  • Improving urban environments. Faced with limited resources, urban farmers are adept at utilizing urban waste streams to strengthen their soil and grow their crops. Garbage is used as compost or fodder for livestock, and nutrient-rich waste water is used for irrigation. By re-using these waste products, urban farms help to reduce the amount of refuse clogging landfills as well as the amount of water used in cities. Community gardens also provide an aesthetically pleasing space and help improve the air quality in urban areas.

To purchase State of the World 2011: Innovations that Nourish the Planet please click HERE. And to watch the one minute book trailer, click HERE.


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Victor Valenzuela selects wheat plants for breeding at the International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center in Mexico.More Photos »


CIUDAD OBREGÓN, Mexico — The dun wheat field spreading out at Ravi P. Singh’s feet offered a possible clue to human destiny. Baked by a desert sun and deliberately starved of water, the plants were parched and nearly dead.

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Temperature Rising

A Vulnerable Harvest

Articles in this series are focusing on the central arguments in the climate debate and examining the evidence for global warming and its consequences.


Dr. Singh, a wheat breeder, grabbed seed heads that should have been plump with the staff of life. His practiced fingers found empty husks.

“You’re not going to feed the people with that,” he said.

But then, over in Plot 88, his eyes settled on a healthier plant, one that had managed to thrive in spite of the drought, producing plump kernels of wheat. “This is beautiful!” he shouted as wheat beards rustled in the wind.

Hope in a stalk of grain: It is a hope the world needs these days, for the great agricultural system that feeds the human race is in trouble.

The rapid growth in farm output that defined the late 20th century has slowed to the point that it is failing to keep up with the demand for food, driven by population increases and rising affluence in once-poor countries.

Consumption of the four staples that supply most human calories — wheat, rice, corn and soybeans — has outstripped production for much of the past decade, drawing once-large stockpiles down to worrisome levels. The imbalance between supply and demand has resulted in two huge spikes in international grain prices since 2007, with some grains more than doubling in cost.

Those price jumps, though felt only moderately in the West, have worsened hunger for tens of millions of poor people, destabilizing politics in scores of countries, fromMexico to Uzbekistan to Yemen. The Haitian government was ousted in 2008 amid food riots, and anger over high prices has played a role in the recent Arab uprisings.

Now, the latest scientific research suggests that a previously discounted factor is helping to destabilize the food system: climate change.

Many of the failed harvests of the past decade were a consequence of weather disasters, like floods in the United States, drought in Australia and blistering heat waves in Europe and Russia. Scientists believe some, though not all, of those events were caused or worsened by human-induced global warming.

Temperatures are rising rapidly during the growing season in some of the most important agricultural countries, and a paper published several weeks ago found that this had shaved several percentage points off potential yields, adding to the price gyrations.

For nearly two decades, scientists had predicted that climate change would be relatively manageable for agriculture, suggesting that even under worst-case assumptions, it would probably take until 2080 for food prices to double.

In part, they were counting on a counterintuitive ace in the hole: that rising carbon dioxide levels, the primary contributor to global warming, would act as a powerful plant fertilizer and offset many of the ill effects of climate change.

Until a few years ago, these assumptions went largely unchallenged. But lately, the destabilization of the food system and the soaring prices have rattled many leading scientists.

“The success of agriculture has been astounding,” said Cynthia Rosenzweig, a researcher at NASA who helped pioneer the study of climate change and agriculture. “But I think there’s starting to be premonitions that it may not continue forever.”

A scramble is on to figure out whether climate science has been too sanguine about the risks. Some researchers, analyzing computer forecasts that are used to advise governments on future crop prospects, are pointing out what they consider to be gaping holes. These include a failure to consider the effects of extreme weather, like the floods and the heat waves that are increasing as the earth warms.

A rising unease about the future of the world’s food supply came through during interviews this year with more than 50 agricultural experts working in nine countries.

These experts say that in coming decades, farmers need to withstand whatever climate shocks come their way while roughly doubling the amount of food they produce to meet rising demand. And they need to do it while reducing the considerable environmental damage caused by the business of agriculture.

Agronomists emphasize that the situation is far from hopeless. Examples are already available, from the deserts of Mexico to the rice paddies of India, to show that it may be possible to make agriculture more productive and more resilient in the face of climate change. Farmers have achieved huge gains in output in the past, and rising prices are a powerful incentive to do so again.

But new crop varieties and new techniques are required, far beyond those available now, scientists said. Despite the urgent need, they added, promised financing has been slow to materialize, much of the necessary work has yet to begin and, once it does, it is likely to take decades to bear results.


“There’s just such a tremendous disconnect, with people not understanding the highly dangerous situation we are in,” said Marianne Bänziger, deputy chief of theInternational Maize and Wheat Improvement Center, a leading research institute in Mexico.

A wheat physiologist at the center, Matthew Reynolds, fretted over the potential consequences of not attacking the problem vigorously.

“What a horrible world it will be if food really becomes short from one year to the next,” he said. “What will that do to society?”

‘The World Is Talking’

Sitting with a group of his fellow wheat farmers, Francisco Javier Ramos Bours voiced a suspicion. Water shortages had already arrived in recent years for growers in his region, the Yaqui Valley, which sits in the Sonoran Desert of northwestern Mexico. In his view, global climate change could well be responsible.

“All the world is talking about it,” Mr. Ramos said as the other farmers nodded.

Farmers everywhere face rising difficulties: water shortages as well as flash floods. Their crops are afflicted by emerging pests and diseases and by blasts of heat beyond anything they remember.

In a recent interview on the far side of the world, in northeastern India, a rice farmer named Ram Khatri Yadav offered his own complaint about the changing climate. “It will not rain in the rainy season, but it will rain in the nonrainy season,” he said. “The cold season is also shrinking.”

Decades ago, the wheat farmers in the Yaqui Valley of Mexico were the vanguard of a broad development in agriculture called the Green Revolution, which used improved crop varieties and more intensive farming methods to raise food production across much of the developing world.

When Norman E. Borlaug, a young American agronomist, began working here in the 1940s under the sponsorship of the Rockefeller Foundation, the Yaqui Valley farmers embraced him. His successes as a breeder helped farmers raise Mexico’s wheat output sixfold.

In the 1960s, Dr. Borlaug spread his approach to India and Pakistan, where mass starvation was feared. Output soared there, too.

Other countries joined the Green Revolution, and food production outstripped population growth through the latter half of the 20th century. Dr. Borlaug became the only agronomist ever to win the Nobel Peace Prize, in 1970, for helping to “provide bread for a hungry world.”

As he accepted the prize in Oslo, he issued a stern warning. “We may be at high tide now,” he said, “but ebb tide could soon set in if we become complacent and relax our efforts.”

As output rose, staple grains — which feed people directly or are used to produce meat, eggs, dairy products and farmed fish — became cheaper and cheaper. Poverty still prevented many people in poor countries from buying enough food, but over all, the percentage of hungry people in the world shrank.

By the late 1980s, food production seemed under control. Governments and foundations began to cut back on agricultural research, or to redirect money into the problems created by intensive farming, like environmental damage. Over a 20-year period, Western aid for agricultural development in poor countries fell by almost half, with some of the world’s most important research centers suffering mass layoffs.

Just as Dr. Borlaug had predicted, the consequences of this loss of focus began to show up in the world’s food system toward the end of the century. Output continued to rise, but because fewer innovations were reaching farmers, the growth rate slowed.

That lull occurred just as food and feed demand was starting to take off, thanks in part to rising affluence across much of Asia. Millions of people added meat and dairy products to their diets, requiring considerable grain to produce. Other factors contributed to demand, including a policy of converting much of the American corn crop into ethanol.

And erratic weather began eating into yields. A 2003 heat wave in Europe that some researchers believe was worsened by human-induced global warming slashed agricultural output in some countries by as much as 30 percent. A long drought in Australia, also possibly linked to climate change, cut wheat and rice production.

In 2007 and 2008, with grain stockpiles low, prices doubled and in some cases tripled. Whole countries began hoarding food, and panic buying ensued in some markets, notably for rice. Food riots broke out in more than 30 countries.

Farmers responded to the high prices by planting as much as possible, and healthy harvests in 2008 and 2009 helped rebuild stocks, to a degree. That factor, plus the global recession, drove prices down in 2009. But by last year, more weather-related harvest failures sent them soaring again. This year, rice supplies are adequate, but with bad weather threatening the wheat and corn crops in some areas, markets remain jittery.

Experts are starting to fear that the era of cheap food may be over. “Our mindset was surpluses,” said Dan Glickman, a former United States secretary of agriculture. “That has just changed overnight.”

 Forty years ago, a third of the population in the developing world was undernourished. By the tail end of the Green Revolution, in the mid-1990s, the share had fallen below 20 percent, and the absolute number of hungry people dipped below 800  million for the first time in modern history. 

But the recent price spikes have helped  cause the largest increases in world hunger in decades. The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations estimated the number of hungry people at 925 million last year, and the number is expected to be higher when a fresh estimate is completed this year. The World Bank says the figure could be as high as 940 million.

Dr. Borlaug’s latest successor at the corn and wheat institute, Hans-Joachim Braun, recently outlined the challenges facing the world’s farmers. on top of the weather disasters, he said, booming cities are chewing up agricultural land and competing with farmers for water. In some of the world’s breadbaskets, farmers have achieved high output only by pumping groundwater much faster than nature can replenish it.

“This is in no way sustainable,” Dr. Braun said.

The farmers of the Yaqui Valley grow their wheat in a near-desert, relying on irrigation. Their water comes by aqueduct from nearby mountains, but for parts of the past decade, rainfall was below normal. Scientists do not know if this has been a consequence of climate change, but Northern Mexico falls squarely within a global belt that is expected to dry further because of human emissions of greenhouse gases.

Dr. Braun is leading efforts to tackle problems of this sort with new wheat varieties that would be able to withstand many kinds of stress, including scant water. Descendants of the plant that one of his breeders, Dr. Singh, found in a wheat field one recent day might eventually wind up in farmers’ fields the world over.

But budgets for this kind of research remain exceedingly tight, frustrating agronomists who feel that the problems are growing more urgent by the year.

“There are biological limitations on how fast we can do this work,” Dr. Braun said. “If we don’t get started now, we are going to be in serious trouble.”

Shaken Assumptions

For decades, scientists believed that the human dependence on fossil fuels, for all the problems it was expected to cause, would offer one enormous benefit.

Carbon dioxide, the main gas released by combustion, is also the primary fuel for the growth of plants. They draw it out of the air and, using the energy from sunlight, convert the carbon into energy-dense compounds like glucose. All human and animal life runs on these compounds.

Humans have already raised the level of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere by 40 percent since the Industrial Revolution, and are on course to double or triple it over the coming century. Studies have long suggested that the extra gas would supercharge the world’s food crops, and might be especially helpful in years when the weather is difficult.

But many of those studies were done in artificial conditions, like greenhouses or special growth chambers. For the past decade, scientists at the University of Illinois have been putting the “CO2 fertilization effect” to a real-world test in the two most important crops grown in the United States.

They started by planting soybeans in a field, then sprayed extra carbon dioxide from a giant tank. Based on the earlier research, they hoped the gas might bump yields as much as 30 percent under optimal growing conditions.

But when they harvested their soybeans, they got a rude surprise: the bump was only half as large. “When we measured the yields, it was like, wait a minute — this is not what we expected,” said Elizabeth A. Ainsworth, a Department of Agriculture researcher who played a leading role in the work.

When they grew the soybeans in the sort of conditions expected to prevail in a future climate, with high temperatures or low water, the extra carbon dioxide could not fully offset the yield decline caused by those factors.

They also ran tests using corn, America’s single most valuable crop and the basis for its meat production and its biofuel industry. While that crop was already known to be less responsive to carbon dioxide, a yield bump was still expected — especially during droughts. The Illinois researchers got no bump.

Their work has contributed to a broader body of research suggesting that extra carbon dioxide does act as plant fertilizer, but that the benefits are less than previously believed — and probably less than needed to avert food shortages. “One of the things that we’re starting to believe is that the positives of CO2 are unlikely to outweigh the negatives of the other factors,” said Andrew D. B. Leakey, another of the Illinois researchers.

Other recent evidence suggests that longstanding assumptions about food production on a warming planet may have been too optimistic.

Two economists, Wolfram Schlenker of Columbia University and Michael J. Roberts of North Carolina State University, have pioneered ways to compare crop yields and natural temperature variability at a fine scale. Their work shows that when crops are subjected to temperatures above a certain threshold — about 84 degrees for corn and 86 degrees for soybeans — yields fall sharply.

This line of research suggests that in the type of climate predicted for the United States by the end of the century, with more scorching days in the growing season, yields of today’s crop varieties could fall by 30 percent or more.

Though it has not yet happened in the United States, many important agricultural countries are already warming rapidly in the growing season, with average increases of several degrees. A few weeks ago, David B. Lobell of Stanford University published a paper with Dr. Schlenker suggesting that temperature increases in France, Russia, China and other countries were suppressing crop yields, adding to the pressures on the food system.

“I think there’s been an under-recognition of just how sensitive crops are to heat, and how fast heat exposure is increasing,” Dr. Lobell said.

Such research has provoked controversy. The findings go somewhat beyond those of a 2007 report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the United Nations body that episodically reviews climate science and advises governments.

That report found that while climate change was likely to pose severe challenges for agriculture in the tropics, it would probably be beneficial in some of the chillier regions of the Northern Hemisphere, and that the carbon dioxide effect should offset many problems.

In an interview at the University of Illinois, one of the leading scientists behind the work there, Stephen P. Long, sharply criticized the 2007 report, saying it had failed to sound a sufficient alarm. “I felt it needed to be much more honest in saying this is our best guess at the moment, but there are probably huge errors in there,” Dr. Long said. “We’re talking about the future food supply of the world.”

William E. Easterling, dean of earth sciences at Pennsylvania State University and a primary author of the 2007 report, said in an interview that the recent research had slightly altered his perspective. “We have probably to some extent overestimated” the benefits of carbon dioxide in computerized crop forecasts, he said. But he added that applying a “correction factor” would probably take care of the problem, and he doubted that the estimates in the report would change drastically as a result.

The 2007 report did point out a hole in the existing body of research: most forecasts had failed to consider several factors that could conceivably produce nasty surprises, like a projected rise in extreme weather events. No sooner had the report been published than food prices began rising, partly because of crop failures caused by just such extremes.

Oxfam, the international relief group,projected recently that food prices would more than double by 2030 from today’s high levels, with climate change responsible for perhaps half the increase. As worries like that proliferate, some scientists are ready to go back to the drawing board regarding agriculture and climate change.

Dr. Rosenzweig, the NASA climate scientist, played a leading role in forming the old consensus. But in an interview at her office in Manhattan, she ticked off recent stresses on the food system and said they had led her to take a fresh look.

She is pulling together a global consortium of researchers whose goal will be to produce more detailed and realistic computer forecasts; she won high-level endorsement for the project at a recent meeting between British and United States officials. “We absolutely have to get the science lined up to provide these answers,” Dr. Rosenzweig said.

Promises Unkept

At the end of a dirt road in northeastern India, nestled between two streams, lies the remote village of Samhauta. Anand Kumar Singh, a farmer there, recently related a story that he could scarcely believe himself.

Last June, he planted 10 acres of a new variety of rice. on Aug. 23, the area was struck by a severe flood that submerged his field for 10 days. In years past, such a flood would have destroyed his crop. But the new variety sprang back to life, yielding a robust harvest.

“That was a miracle,” Mr. Singh said.

The miracle was the product not of divine intervention but of technology — an illustration of how far scientists may be able to go in helping farmers adapt to the problems that bedevil them.

“It’s the best example in agriculture,” said Julia Bailey-Serres, a researcher at the University of California, Riverside, who has done genetic work on the rice variety that Mr. Singh used. “The submergence-tolerant rice essentially sits and waits out the flood.”

In the heyday of the Green Revolution, the 1960s, leaders like Dr. Borlaug founded an international network of research centers to focus on the world’s major crops. The corn and wheat center in Mexico is one. The new rice variety that is exciting farmers in India is the product of another, the International Rice Research Institute in the Philippines.

Leading researchers say it is possible to create crop varieties that are more resistant to drought and flooding and that respond especially well to rising carbon dioxide. The scientists are less certain that crops can be made to withstand withering heat, though genetic engineering may eventually do the trick.

The flood-tolerant rice was created from an old strain grown in a small area of India, but decades of work were required to improve it. Money was so tight that even after the rice had been proven to survive floods for twice as long as previous varieties, distribution to farmers was not assured. Then an American charity, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, stepped in with a $20 million grant to finance final development and distribution of the rice in India and other countries. It may get into a million farmers’ hands this year.

The Gateses, widely known for their work in public health, have also become leading backers of agricultural projects in recent years. “I’m an optimist,” Mr. Gates said in an interview. “I think we can get crops that will mitigate many of our problems.”

The Gates Foundation has awarded $1.7 billion for agricultural projects since 2006, but even a charity as large as it is cannot solve humanity’s food problems on its own. Governments have recognized that far more effort is needed on their part, but they have been slow to deliver.

In 2008 and 2009, in the midst of the political crises set off by food prices, the world’s governments outbid one another to offer support. At a conference in L’Aquila, Italy, they pledged about $22 billion for agricultural development.

It later turned out, however, that no more than half of that was new money not previously committed to agriculture, and two years later, the extra financing has not fully materialized. “It’s a disappointment,” Mr. Gates said.

The Obama administration has won high marks from antihunger advocates for focusing on the issue. President Obama pledged $3.5 billion at L’Aquila, more than any other country, and the United States has begun an ambitious initiative called Feed the Future to support agricultural development in 20 of the neediest countries.

So far, the administration has won $1.9 billion from Congress. Amid the budget struggles in Washington, it remains to be seen whether the United States will fully honor its pledge.

Perhaps the most hopeful sign nowadays is that poor countries themselves are starting to invest in agriculture in a serious way, as many did not do in the years when food was cheap.

In Africa, largely bypassed by the Green Revolution but with enormous potential, a dozen countries are on the verge of fulfilling a promise to devote 10 percent of their budgets to farm development, up from 5 percent or less.

“In my country, every penny counts,” Agnes Kalibata, the agriculture minister of Rwanda, said in an interview. With difficulty, Rwanda has met the 10 percent pledge, and she cited a terracing project in the country’s highlands that has raised potato yields by 600 percent for some farmers.

Yet the leading agricultural experts say that poor countries cannot solve the problems by themselves. The United Nations recently projected that global population would hit 10 billion by the end of the century, 3 billion more than today. Coupled with the demand for diets richer in protein, the projections mean that food production may need to double by later in the century.

Unlike in the past, that demand must somehow be met on a planet where little new land is available for farming, where water supplies are tightening, where the temperature is rising, where the weather has become erratic and where the food system is already showing serious signs of instability.

“We’ve doubled the world’s food production several times before in history, and now we have to do it one more time,” said Jonathan A. Foley, a researcher at the University of Minnesota. “The last doubling is the hardest. It is possible, but it’s not going to be easy.”

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The Green Revolution largely bypassed Africa because the continent is dependent on rain to water its crops. Above, a Malawian with his village’s failed corn crop during a drought.


That term is used to describe the enormous gulf between the crop yields obtained by the most successful farmers and the least successful. Farmers in the United States, for example, routinely grow five times as much corn per acre as small farmers in Africa. While Africa has the world’s largest concentration of below-potential agriculture, other areas also lag. They include parts of South Asia, such as rice farming areas in northeastern India, and the agricultural regions of many ex-Communist countries.In my article on Sunday about the future of the food system, I briefly mentioned the potential for improved agricultural output in Africa. The situation there is a prime example of a larger problem that concerns the world’s agronomists: the yield gap.

Experts say that closing the gap must be a prime strategy for feeding the world. And there is no technological mystery about how to do it: the strategy of using high-yielding modern crop varieties and nitrogen fertilizer has already been proven, in the Green Revolution, to raise output for farmers. But getting these tools into the hands of poor smallholder farmers requires both political leadership and large public investment.

China did it, transitioning from a famine-plagued country to one able to feed itself. To a considerable extent, India and Pakistan did it. But most African governments, chronically short of funds and often plagued by poor leadership, have not done it.

The original Green Revolution bypassed Africa for other reasons, too. It worked best in the irrigated agriculture systems that had long prevailed in Asia, and for a handful of major cereal crops, primarily rice, wheat and corn. Irrigation is relatively uncommon in Africa, a continent dependent on rain to water its crops.

Moreover, while the big grains have made inroads in Africa, the continent still depends on a slew of smaller crops as dietary staples, like cassava, savory types of bananas, sorghum, millet and so forth. These crops were not the target of much investment in the original Green Revolution.

Nowadays, with a renewed focus on global food security, efforts are afoot to bring a new Green Revolution to Africa and other areas plagued by yield gaps. And the question is not simply: Can it be done? The better question is: Can it be done sustainably?

For as I outlined in a blog post on Sunday, intensive agriculture causes many environmental problems, particularly in areas where heavy subsidies for nitrogen fertilizer lead to its overuse. Some of the nitrogen volatilizes into a major greenhouse gas, and some of it washes into rivers and helps create dead zones where the rivers meet the ocean.

Perhaps even more worrisome, much of the intensive agriculture created by the Green Revolution is not sustainable over the long haul even on its own terms, since it depends on mining non-renewable resources. In parts of India, farmers are withdrawing groundwater at alarming rates; that is true in other areas, too, including parts of China and the United States.

Those risks would be bad enough, but as I outlined in my article, a new one looms: climate change. No continent’s agriculture is more at risk from climate change than Africa’s. So the task on the continent is not just agricultural development, but making that agriculture more resilient in the face of rising risks from heat, drought and erratic weather of all kinds.

In light of these challenges, many experts have begun to use the term “sustainable intensification” to describe what needs to happen. That essentially means that we need to close the yield gap in as many places as possible, especially in Africa, but in a way that is as sensitive as possible to environmental concerns and assuring the long-run durability of agriculture itself.

“We’ve got to increase the amount of food, and we’ve got to do it without damaging the environment,” said Roy Steiner, a deputy director of global development at the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. “That’s not an easy thing to do.”

As I mentioned briefly in my article, numerous entities are trying to tackle these problems. The United States has introduced an ambitious new program called Feed the Future to help 20 of the poorest countries improve their agriculture. Governments of other rich countries have pledged billions in aid, although as I reported, the money has been slow in coming.

The World Bank has increased its lending for agricultural projects. TheRockefeller Foundation, the original instigator of the Green Revolution, is still involved in supporting agriculture in poor countries.

“We’ve got to increase the amount of food, and we’ve got to do it without damaging the environment. That’s not an easy thing to do.”

— Roy Steiner,
deputy director,
Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation

But perhaps the single most interesting new entrant on this stage is the Gates Foundation. When I interviewed Bill Gates, he told me that the decision he and his wife made in 2006 to invest in agricultural development was partly a function of the huge gift to their foundation that year by Warren Buffett, the billionaire investor. “Without his gift, what we ended up doing in agriculture would have been very modest,” Mr. Gates said. “The fact that we have a reasonably sized program — he gets a lot of the credit for that.”

The Gates Foundation has posted its strategy and a list of its agricultural projects, and Mr. Gates gave speeches in 2009 (here — video and text are on separate tabs) and this year (here, also separate tabs) outlining the foundation’s approach.

When he delivered this year’s speech in Washington, Julie Borlaug, the granddaughter of Norman E. Borlaug of Green Revolution fame, stood up in the audience to thank Mr. Gates for his work.

Among the major recipients of money from the Gates and Rockefeller foundations is an entity called the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa, which is working to develop more advanced tools and techniques. A separate project called Water Efficient Maize for Africa aims to get high-yielding, drought-resistant corn seeds into the hands of African farmers.



Associated PressBill and Melinda Gates examine cassava seeds and roots from a demonstration plot in Abuja, Nigeria.

Not only is the Gates Foundation paying to scale up flood-tolerant rice in India and nearby countries, it is working to bring variations of that crop to Africa. one of the foundation’s most interesting endeavors has been to help finance a World Food Program strategy of buying local crops within Africa, as a way to connect small farmers better to regional markets.

The Gateses and their foundation have been attacked ideologically, for instance here andhere, for some of their positions, including a refusal to rule out genetically modified crops as a potential answer to agricultural problems in Africa and Asia. The critics also fear that the Gates Foundation’s work will lead to more corporate control of agriculture in poor countries.

Mr. Gates answered some of this criticism in his 2009 speech in Des Moines, declaring that technological approaches and environmental sustainability were not really in conflict. “I believe it’s a false choice, and it’s dangerous for the field,” he said then.

Activist groups have also faulted the Gates Foundation because a separate entity that manages its investments has bought some shares of Monsanto, the big American agricultural company. (The Gateses explain the investment philosophy of their money-management arm here.)

Anybody who has watched the Gates Foundation over the years knows that it has a long history of trying to work with corporations rather than going to war with them; in fact, the foundation pioneered a whole new approach that leverages foundation money and corporate interests in pursuit of social goals. That tactic has paid dividends for the Gateses in the field of public health, inducing drug companies like GlaxoSmithKline to take on projects to help some of the world’s poorest people.



Wendy Carlson for The New York TimesA drought-resistant corn variety at a Monsanto greenhouse.

It will be interesting to see what they manage to coax out of the Monsantos and Syngentas of the world. Already, Monsanto has donatedrights to a gene-altered corn variety designed to resist drought so that it can be adapted for Africa. Natalie DiNicola, a vice president at Monsanto, told me that her company was one of 20 or so agricultural companies that had committed publicly to working with entities like the Gates Foundation, “all recognizing that we need a new vision for agriculture that’s going to be able to meet food security needs, conserve resources, and serve as a foundation for economic development.”

Abroad, Mr. and Mrs. Gates have become as well-known for their charitable work as for Mr. Gates’s role in founding Microsoft. Indeed, one of the most interesting elements of their role as charitable entrepreneurs is that the Gateses have become, in effect, roving ambassadors for the United States.

My colleague Hari Kumar interviewed a farmer in India, Anand Kumar Singh, who had been amazed by the resilience of the flood-tolerant rice financed by the Gates Foundation. Mr. Singh was among a group of farmers in Bihar state who met with Bill and Melinda Gates when they visited India a few months ago.

“The world’s richest man and his wife sat on the ground with the poor farmers of Bihar and inquired about our agriculture and our lives,” Mr. Singh told Mr. Kumar. “I cannot forget that experience throughout my life.”

The Gates Foundation has been working in agriculture for only five years, and the renewed international focus by the world’s governments on agricultural development is even shorter than that, dating essentially to the 2008 food crisis. Many agronomists I spoke with for my article are hopeful that these efforts will, in coming years, produce what some of them call a “greener revolution” in the agriculture of poor countries.

“There are more pieces of the puzzle in place now,” said Robert Paarlberg, an agricultural expert at Wellesley College, “than at any time in previous decades.”


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어떻게 돼지가 농장 규모에서 에너지와 돈을 절약시키는 두엄을 생산할 수 있는가

http://www.permaculture.co.uk/articles/how-pigs-can-compost-manure-farm-scale-saving-you-fuel-and-money



Farmer, Rebecca Hosking, takes a trip to a biodynamic farm in Cornwall to find out how they use Joel Salatin's method of composting with pigs, rather than diesel, to turn their cow manure into fertliiser. These are pioneering farming techniques in the UK




I'm sure many are familiar with this scenario: you're driving along in the countryside and you're suddenly hit with the overwhelming stench of manure from a farm. A dilemma ensues do you A) wind up your window to stop any more of the smell entering the car thus trapping the low level smell that's already made it in; or do you B) keep the window down, taking on the full brunt in the hope the smell will quickly pass and fresh air will blow the rest of it away.



When this happens to us (we're windows open people) we usually comment – 'That farm is wasting money'.

What we're all actually smelling is a combination of Ammonia (NH3), Sulfur Dioxide (SO2), Hydrogen Sulfide (H2S) Nitric oxide (NO) and numerous volatile organic compounds (VOCs). Mixed in with those pungent gases are their odorless greenhouse bedfellows, nitrogen dioxide (NO2), Carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane (CH4).

Whether the smell from the farm is emanating from a yard dung heap, a slurry pit, a shed full of manure from over-wintered cattle or the muck spreader spattering its way across the field... it is the aroma of valuable nutrients fizzing off into the atmosphere where they do considerably more damage than good. Nearly all of these smells are the result of anaerobic decomposition – or as it's known to the gardener, poor composting.

Now not all farmers are die hard environmentalists and some may even doubt the science behind global warming. All of them, however, are concerned with making ends meet and, as such, the escape of these gasses (particularly the nitrogenous ones) from the farm, where they will fertilize nothing but the nostrils of passers-by, must be a concern. If half the nitrogen in your farmyard manure wafts off over the M5 corridor and beyond then you have to pay good money to replace it to keep the farm productive. And with synthetic nitrogen fertilizer currently trading around £350/tonne, the cost soon adds up.

Gardeners have long known the best way to lock down nitrogen in manure is to compost it; and the best way to do that is to physically turn the material to aerate it. Many studies have trialed alternative methods but as yet nothing beats brute intervention. In all fairness, on a garden scale even we've found this is relatively easy to achieve, all you need is a sturdy fork, a bit of elbow grease, cups of tea and biccies.

However if I walk into one of our cattle sheds where the stock has been wintered for three months, the volume of dung to turn and aerate becomes an overwhelming challenge. Could it be possible with human labour? Well, nobody in their right mind would willingly volunteer for this job, no farmer could afford to pay for the necessary workforce and we abolished slavery in England back in 1772 (thankfully), ...so no, it's not an option.


3개월 동안 12마리의 소가...


Instead immediate thoughts turn to diesel powered machinery, much work with a front-end loader and investing in a trailer-operated compost turner. This is farmer speak for a lot of money, time, effort and fuel; making it an expensive exercise to even contemplate.

But what if there is another way, which is fraction of the price, requires no manual labor, no fossil fuel and no new farm machinery?

Enter Pigs; Stage Right

I first became aware about using pigs for this job back in 2007 while reading about holistic farmer – and a bit of a visionary – Joel Salatin. I'm sure many of you will already be aware of his work.

Joel and his family run Polyface Farm in West Virginia. He openly admits they stumbled backwards into pig rearing. Initially they purchased just a few pigs to use as a cost saving device to aerate the farm's cattle dung into compost. Polyface's 'pigaerator pork' as the Salatins named it is now one of their most popular products.

Since then I've heard a lot about the theory of pigaeration and we've longed to trial it here, but the older generation on this farm, namely my father and uncle, don't like change – I think I may have mentioned this before in previous posts! Anyway, in addition they have an irrational dislike of pigs so it's not going to happen here anytime soon. However, luckily this year our friends decided to test it out on their farm so finally I got to witness it in action.

Jim and Laura with their sheepdog GlenJim and Laura with their sheepdog GlenLaura and Jim Wallwork manage Tregillis, an organic, biodynamic farm at South Petherwin in Cornwall. As I've often joked with Laura, I'm happy keeping an open mind but still struggle with cow horns acting as cosmic antennae but, when it come to soil health, we could all learn an awful lot from the biodynamicists. At Tregillis, soil health and condition is a priority, hence their interest in composting dung on a large scale. Last week I popped down to see them and their pigs at work and Laura kindly walked me through what had been happening.

Laura has used Salatin's approach as a template but has adapted the materials and ingredients to suit the particulars of her own farm. For the composting to be successful and the pigs to be agreeable, the preparation began right back at the beginning of December as the cattle first entered the shed.



Each day while bedding up the stock with fresh oat straw, Laura liberally sprinkled their own grown polycrop of peas, triticale and oats in amongst the bedding.

This differs slightly from Salatin's original ingredients of woodchip as bedding and corn (maize) as feed. However, whether you use peas or maize, the results are the same. The dry food gets stomped into the bedding by the cattle, where it ferments in the compacted anaerobic dung and urine. The result at the end of winter is thousands of little, sweet, mildly alcoholic piggy treats tantalizingly hidden in a barn full of manure.

A handful of peas, triticale and oatsA handful of peas, triticale and oatsCattle out... send for the hogsCattle out... send for the hogsWith the arrival of Spring, the cattle go back out onto the pasture and the pigs are let in to commence their own version of a giant Easter egg hunt.

By the time I'd arrived the pigs had been at it for a week and had made short work of turning and ploughing the dung back and forth whilst snuffling through the deep litter. It was a joy to see such happy pigs – stimulated, entertained and getting plenty of exercise – a far cry from any intensive pig system.

The next sense that struck me was the agreeable smell. Gone was the all too familiar aroma of cow urea that catches the back of your throat; instead a far milder, sweeter fragrance. Not quite forest floor but closer to that than the smell of raw slurry.

Pigaeration at workPigaeration at work

Finally I noticed the texture of the litter was completely different to what I'd expect to see in a used cattle barn. It was far drier with more noticeable brittle and broken up straw. As a comparison, a clod of dung of the same age from one of our barns could knock someone unconscious at twenty yards whereas the stuff from Tregillis would scatter in the spring breeze before it even reached its target.

Adding Seaweed

Seaweed to add minerals to compostSeaweed to add minerals to compostLaura has come up with her own addition of heartily broadcasting dried seaweed across the bedding; if this works then it's a smart move. UK soils, owing to thousands of years of agricultural pounding, are mineral poor. Livestock farmers heavily rely on bought in mineral/salt licks to supplement their animals' dietary needs and cattle get through these licks like...well...a dose of salts.

The licks are expensive and completely unsustainable so by adding the dried seaweed to the bedding Laura hopes to boost her pasture's mineral content when applying this rich compost later in the year.

In a further Tregillis enhancement, Laura has also been adding a biodynamic herbal preparation to improve the composting process and final result. Like many things biodynamic, I don't think anyone really knows exactly how it works but it does. As the late ecologist, Frank Egler, said "Nature is not more complicated than we think; nature is more complicated than we can think" and that certainly applies to compost. The trillions upon trillions of births, deaths, rebirths, predations, consumptions, emissions, absorptions, assimilations and reactions that occur to create healthy nourishing compost really is beyond comprehension

So were Laura and Jim happy with the results? ...yes and no.

Laura pointed to parts of the bedding that were still wet and to the very bottom layer of dung that the pigs had not touched but she knew exactly where they'd gone wrong. By not spreading the food evenly and not putting a thick layer down first at the beginning of December before bedding up with straw had meant the pigs were not interested in those areas. Pigs are very much led by their snouts so no food means no aerating but it's something they can easily correct next winter.

Over all though Laura is pleased with the pigs' efforts. The compost/dung will next be taken out of the shed, covered and left to cure for a good few months before being spread on Tregillis pastures.

The classic before and after shotThe classic before and after shot

As for the pigs, well to paraphrase Joel Salatin, "They are farm machinery that never needs an oil change, they appreciate over time; and when you're done with them, you can either breed from them, sell them, or eat them." This year, Laura and Jim have a load of lovely sausages in the freezer.

A farmers multi toolA farmers multi tool

Rebecca Hosking and Tim Green made the BBC2 film, 'A Farm For a Future' which explored peak oil and climate change in relation to farming. Whilst researching, they discovered permaculture and decided to return to the small mixed farm that Rebecca grew up on in Devon, help with day to day tasks and experiment with some cutting edge ideas and techniques. They regularly report the results for Permaculture online.

Rebecca and Tim write a regular BLOG on permaculture and farming for Permaculture online.



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