03) WHAT WILL WE EAT
WHEN THE SOIL IS GONE?
(The
following article is from
the April 16-30,
2008
issue of People's Voice, Canada's leading communist newspaper. Articles
can be reprinted free if the source is credited. Subscription rates in
Canada: $25/year, or $12 low income rate; for U.S. readers - $25 US per
year; other overseas readers - $25 US or $35 CDN per year. Send to:
People's Voice, c/o PV Business Manager, 133 Herkimer St. Unit 502,
Hamilton,
ON, L8P 2H3.)
By
Kimball Cariou
More than one environmental crisis threatens our planet. While most of
our collective attention is focused on global warming and climate
change, the topsoil which sustains life is quickly eroding.
On average, the Earth's land surface is
covered with about one meter of topsoil - the nutrient-rich matter
which humans use to grow most of our food. But scientists estimate that
we are now losing about 1 percent of this topsoil every year to
erosion, mostly because of agriculture.
In effect, modern capitalist agricultural
practices are outstripping the Earth's natural rate of creating
topsoil. The U.S. National Academy of Sciences has determined that
cropland is being eroded at least 10 times faster than the time it
takes for lost soil to be replaced.
University of Washington professor David
Montgomery's popular book, Dirt, calls public attention to this
potential environmental disaster. Montgomery describes modern
agricultural practices as "soil mining."
Healthy topsoil cannot be created quickly. It
is a biologically diverse complex of organisms: microbes, fungi,
nutrients and earthworms whose digestive tracts transform the fine
grains of sterile rock and plant detritus. Topsoil grows back at a rate
of an inch or two over hundreds of years.
A growing number of farmers and agricultural
scientists are urging "no-till" methods, which involve not tilling the
land between plantings, leaving crop stubble to reduce erosion and
planting new seeds between the stubble rows. Erosion rates in some
areas of North America have improved recently because of better
conservation farming practices, but this simply slows the net loss.
Meanwhile, the conversion of farmland to urban use continues to
exacerbate the problem.
And while no-till farming can reduce topsoil
erosion, the switch requires heavy upfront investment and learning new
techniques. It also tends to depend more on herbicides because weeds
can't be controlled by plowing them into the soil.
Organic farming methods also can reduce soil
loss. Agricultural researchers have found increases in soil health,
water retention and regrowth when organic methods replace traditional
practices. But the global scale of the problem far outstrips progress
made by recent shifts towards organic farming.
The world's worst soil loss trouble spot is
sub-Saharan Africa, which faces a combination of some of the world's
worst soils, rapid population-growth rates, and widespread soil erosion
and desertification. Per-capita grain production peaked in Africa in
1967, and has declined one percent annually ever since, contributing to
the rapidly increasing number of malnourished people.
Other regions are also showing problem signs.
The southern portion of the former USSR has been seriously damaged by
many centuries of erosion, and half of Russia's arable land is now
unsuitable for farming.
In Canada's prairie region, wind erosion
accounts for twice as much soil loss as water erosion, reflecting
attempts to expand cropland into arid lands such as the Palliser
Triangle which should never have been farmed intensively. The loss of
about half the organic matter from Canada's prairie croplands over the
past seventy years points to a future of decreasing productivity and
increased soil erosion.
In the US, problems include a history of major
dams, many of which have captured huge erosion sediments, and the
cotton monocultures of the southern states, which eventually forced
croplands into pulpwood plantations. Under the Reagan administration,
policies to support soil conservation were abandoned in favour of
allowing erosion down to the depth of root zones (about six inches),
when farmers would feel compelled, on their own, to conserve soil. That
disastrous policy shift was later reversed, but soil loss remains very
serious.
Looking at the issue from a wider capitalist
perspective, it is clear that the economic pressures to generate export
earnings are directly linked to soil erosion. The process has not been
reversed; in fact, the boom in crops for biofuels has been compared to
burning off the last few inches of mid-Western topsoil to keep private
vehicles moving.
Advocates for biofuels claim that using
agricultural "waste" to make fuel can help solve energy shortages and
reduce greenhouse gas emissions. They also argue that byproducts of
this process can be used to regenerate topsoil.
But this approach has its own problems. Making
fuel from unused portions of plants that are normally plowed under
increases the need for nitrogen fertilizers, which release the most
potent greenhouse gas of all; nitrous oxide. Much of the residual crop
biomass must be returned to the soil to maintain topsoil integrity,
otherwise the rate of topsoil erosion will increase dramatically. In
effect, biofuels are mining our topsoil for energy, and the recycling
of byproducts does nothing to reverse the overall
danger. Using wood chips to make ethanol initially
sounds like a good way to cut down on the soil erosion problem. But
remember that this material is already used to make paper, particle
board, pellet fuel for stoves, and many other products. Every part of
the trees we cut down for lumber can be used for something, including
the bark which is used for garden mulch. The huge amounts of wood waste
created by current corporate profiteering practices in the forest
industry could be used to produce fuel, but in reality, North American
forests are already overused producing lumber, let alone liquid
biofuels. This strategy has very limited possibilities to reduce the
topsoil erosion crisis.
Another long-standing capitalist approach is
to develop new technologies to expand food resources without requiring
more land for cultivation. During the second half of the last century,
sharp increases in agricultural productivity were called the "green
revolution". Increased yields were gained by planting monocultures of
hybrid crop varieties and by the application of large amounts of
inorganic fertilizer, irrigation water, and pesticides.
This resulted in dramatic increases in crop
yields, first in more developed capitalist countries, and later to the
global south, involving the cultivation of new high yield, fast-growing
dwarf varieties of rice and wheat, specially bred for tropical and
subtropical climates. However, achieving high yields with these new
crops required much larger inputs of fertilizers, water and pesticides.
Today, it now takes about 1.2 barrels of oil
to produce a single ton of grain in more developed countries - seven
times greater than in 1950! Capitalist industrial agriculture has
become addicted to oil, using about 8% of world oil output.
As soil fertility declines and the world
appears to near the limits of industrial food production, rising prices
and hunger are becoming more prevalent. Anger over high food and fuel
costs have sparked violent protests in many countries, from "tortilla
riots" in Mexico, to clashes between villagers and police in India, and
the arrest of 300 people in landlocked Burkina Faso. The UN World Food
Programme says staple food prices in some parts of Africa have risen by
40 percent or more in six months.
The scope of the impending soil and food
catastrophe raises a critical question: is there an alternative?
One answer comes from socialist Cuba, which
was forced to radically overhaul its agricultural system after the
demise of the Soviet Union, its main trading partner. Factories closed,
food supplies plummeted, and the average daily caloric intake of Cubans
dropped by a third.
Suddenly without fertilizer, pesticides, fuel
and machinery parts, Cuba turned to organic methods, oxen, and urban
gardens. In 1992, the country's urban agriculture was virtually zero.
By the end of the decade millions of tons of food were being grown with
cities, making use of every empty space: vacant lots, school
playgrounds, patios and back yards.
Cuba created the largest program in
sustainable agriculture ever undertaken. By 1999 agricultural
production had recovered and in some cases reached historic levels.
Today, Cuba is recognized worldwide as the
first country to combine environmental sustainability with social
justice. It remains to be seen exactly how Cuban agriculture will
continue to develop, but its experience shows that a country can feed
its population and begin to restore its soil without depending on
traditional capitalist policies.
Here in North America, if the topsoil crisis
continues, we may be compelled to consider a similar radical shift
sooner than anyone can imagine. In fact, it may be the only way to save
the global environment from collapse.