by Pops » Mon 28 May 2007, 12:14:06
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Mircea', 'W')hat are we doing now? Growing the same crops in the same fields year in and year out over and over and over, except now we have and must use chemical fertilizers to replenish the mineral and nutrient content.
I think Micrea has hit on the real problem, the massive consolidation of agriculture, which a simple switch of energy inputs can’t save – we simply use too much. Can’t really blame the farmer more than any other industry that took advantage of cheap, seemingly inexhaustible energy.
I raise calves that someone else buys and trucks to pasture perhaps hundreds of miles away, who then sells them to a feedlot hundreds of more miles distant that trucks in grain from even more hundreds of miles away and finally the beef is trucked more hundreds of miles away to market.
Todays system of beef production requires huge trucks, huge tractors & combines, fertilizer up the butt (instead of from the butt), grain drying, interstates, etc
Pretty silly when you think about it since cows really only need sun, water and grass. The only benefit of the current system is the beef is marbled with white fat instead of yellow and cheap fuel makes it more profitable.
OTOH, don’t think ag is a stagnant business, sure it takes farmers a while to change methods but there have been big changes since the green revolution including no-till, precision application of inputs, intensive management rotational grazing, better crop rotation schemes, increased use of nitrogen fixing crops, biological pest control, better water management, and the list goes on.
Some of those are techno-fixes certainly but others are simply a return to past practices where the
better living through chemistry theory didn’t pan out. As well, it isn’t only Monsanto et al that do experimental breeding, individuals, universities and government agencies like the NRCS are continually improving crops, animals and methods with an eye towards conservation, better resistance to pests and disease and to be better adapted to the local climate. I expect that to not only continue but as PO becomes more and more apparent to shift even more towards conservation.
Finally, on my little place a 40-horse tractor is a luxury – a little solar powered tractor and appropriately sized implements would work fine. 50 years down the road I suspect 40 to 120 acre diversified farms to be the norm and 300hp tractors the exception – just a gut feeling.
http://www.sustainabletable.org/issues/energy/
http://www.nrcs.usda.gov/feature/outlook/Energy.pdf
The legitimate object of government, is to do for a community of people, whatever they need to have done, but can not do, at all, or can not, so well do, for themselves -- in their separate, and individual capacities.
-- Abraham Lincoln, Fragment on Government (July 1, 1854)