Page added on November 17, 2010
Regenerative Agriculture in a Peak Oil World
Written by Professor Chris Rhodes
Thursday, 11 November 2010 17:28
In the face of peak oil and in order to curb carbon emissions, methods of farming that depend less on oil and natural gas, respectively to run machinery and to make synthetic fertilizers, must be sought. Such options are to be found within the framework of regenerative agriculture, but the transition from current industrialised agriculture to these alternative strategies will prove testing.
It is an illusion to think we can continue to use as much energy as we do now. No one can entirely rule-out that some extravagant technology will be forthcoming, e.g. solar power or nuclear fusion on the full-scale of 500 EJ/year as we get through now, but the particular issue of matching liquid fuels derived currently almost entirely from petroleum appears insurmountable. The “solution” is probably the collective of individual solutions, and that means adopting a completely different paradigm of human philosophy and intention. The most pressing demand is how to feed the population of the world, and how to adapt industrialised conurbations, with cities provided for entirely from external regions for their food and electricity. If oil is the most vulnerable element in the energy-mix as the life-blood of transportation, then we must aim to live with less transportation, and this includes the means and distribution implicit to modern food production.
I for one am now preparing for the future with agroforestry – check it out. It is the most intelligent sustainable food production system i have come across. Amazing and it works.
One Comment on "Regenerative Agriculture in a Peak Oil World"
KenZ300 on Thu, 18th Nov 2010 12:07 am
How do we ensure that we have sustainable communities?
We need to produce local energy and products. Wind, solar, geothermal and biofuels all need to be produced locally with local labor.
Goods and services need to be produced closer to the point of use. Globalization will get expensive in a world of high oil prices. Shipping goods around the world may not make sense.
If one big retailer like WalMart made a conscious effort to try to source goods locally we could move in the direction of sustainability and produce local jobs.
Without local jobs there are no local customers.