Can Progressive, Cutting-edge Organic Agriculture Feed Everyone?
Change We Can Believe In
In 2007, then presidential candidate Barack Obama
promised that if elected he would direct more money for organic
agriculture. He also said, “If I am elected president of the United
States, I will support legislation that will require the mandatory
labeling of genetically modified foods.” Now, well into his second term,
it seems Obama has no intention of honoring his promises. Even if Obama
honored his word, would such steps be enough to ensure our survival?
Can organic farms yield comparable outputs with conventional farms?
To answer this question in 2002, Dr. Paul Mader and colleagues analyzed
more than two decades of data. On average, organic farms yielded 80% of
the output conventional farms produced. Although the yield was lower,
the quality of the produce and the quality of the soil was far superior
in every conceivable way. There are more nutrients found in organic
foods.The use of chemicals, so prevalent in modern agriculture, may result in a high yield (for a time), but their use is actually more expensive than organic food production. Conventional agriculture is more profitable for farmers due to government subsidies. That’s right; our taxes pay farmers more to cause harm to the environment and to produce chemically laden foods.
Subsistence strategies are a cultural phenomena. Just as language cannot be separated from culture neither can food be separated from culture. The food people eat and how the food is produced varies dramatically from one group of people to another. As with linguistic centrism, people tend to think that their way is the best way. Americans are often under this delusion in regards to feeding the world without simultaneously polluting it. Could the world feed itself without the so called benefits brought forth by the chemicals and drugs used in conventional agriculture?
Sustainable Farms:
Farmers all over the world are proving it can be done, among them farmers such as Takao Furuno, a successful organic farmer from Japan. The Furuno farm works as a part of an ecosystem. Every year, after planting their rice, they release hundreds of ducklings into the rice paddies. The ducklings consume weeds that would otherwise compete with the rice. They also consume pests such as insects and snails. The ducklings fertilize the rice with their waste and oxygenate the water by their movements.

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