by Pops » Fri 06 Feb 2015, 17:59:35
I'm data impaired so will just address your points,
We tripled yield since 1960, why are we prevented from tripling it again? I've mentioned before that maize converts about 3% of sunlight into carbs yet sugar cane converts 18% - why can't we work on that?
The reason some plants take up P better than others is they have more growing root tips that capture p from the soil, why can't we work on that?
Just a couple of thoughts off the top, I'm sure if I can pull those out of my ear that smart people have been working on them and a hundred or thousand more.
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Oil is neat because it is so concentrated that we can waste huge amounts doing nothing - running the radio and a/c in the tractor cab, etc. I've worked on a couple farms, big and little and there is huge waste - even though - as I've also said before - ag only uses 2% of total consumption to the farm gate and 1% for transport from there. Essentially 97% of oil will disappear before tractors run out.
For that matter soy beans yield something over 3.2 efficiency energy as biodiesel. Contrast that to .83 for petroleum based diesel. And beans yield less than 50 gals of oil an acre while peanuts, rape, sunflower and other offer 2-3 times that.
Obviously big change needs to take place; from transport to processing to packaging but petroleum or veg oil used for traction will be the last thing to change. IMHO.
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)