Organic Farming Examined 79
Yokai writes "An article to be released in Science shows that organic farming makes sense. The 21 year study by a Swiss team shows that even though the organic patch had 20% less yield than conventional farming, the input of fertilizer and energy was reduced by between 34% and 53%, and pesticide use by 97%, leading them to believe that organic farming makes sense. Also, the soil from the organic plot was healthier and held more organisms- including those that kill pests."
correct link (Score:4, Informative)
Not related to despotism (Score:1)
Re:Not related to despotism (Score:1)
US does send food (Score:2)
Excerpt from one of the reports: "A major shipment of U.S.-donated relief food for the Southern Africa region arrived in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania on May 26. The U.S.-chartered vessel "Liberty Glory" carried the 33,230 MT of food commodities, valued at $13.3 million. The shipment included 16,940 MT of maize, beans, and vegetable oil for Malawi, valued at $8.9 million, and 8,500 MT for Zambia, worth $2.9 million. These commodities were quickly off-loaded for onward transport to Malawi and Zambia via truck and rail. The "Liberty Glory" is scheduled to arrive in Maputo, Mozambique on June 5-7 in order to deliver the remaining 9,890 MT of food, valued at $4.8 million, for use in Mozambique. In addition, USAID/FFP is in the process of procuring approximately 36,450 MT of additional emergency food commodities, worth $16 million."
You may be confusing... (Score:1)
At what point (Score:1)
Where did I say America is bad (Score:1)
Ephesians 6:12 For we fight not against flesh and blood but against...(the translation here is confused)
Re:Not related to despotism (Score:1)
The horrors committed by US generocity.
Certainly, we can be doing alot more (allowing the countries to feed themselves instead of providing beef cattle for McDonalds, for example); but the US isn't the only one that needs to do it.
Re:Not related to despotism (Score:1)
I don't know that the U.S. values human life to any great extent per se, but they go about devalueing it less violently.
That would imply... (Score:1)
Re:That would imply... (Score:2)
I've yet to see a confirmed case otherwise.
Re:Organic farming or . . . (Score:1)
If you add "market forces" to your despotism, we could probably feed them with a couple of carrots.
Ok, I know that is an exageration, but inavailability of food is rarely reducable to a lack of food. It is simple economics- the price of food is low, the producer cannot make a profit at that price, the producer keeps the food in a warehouse until the demand can raise prices, the food rots, people die, the price goes up. This seems crazy, but it happens over and over through modern history. Even in drought conditions, there is always an economic factor - otherwise one could live on imported food. Do not blame nature for the invisible hand's actions (though nature can be quite sadistic herself).
Re:Organic farming or . . . (Score:1)
Will that really work? (Score:2)
And whatever it is, people will still starve - it's nothing to do with agricultural efficiency. There's plenty of food to go around, but other people don't want them to get it. People are starving because there is evil in the world (not that we should give up trying to help of course).
Example: in Sudan, when food is being distributed, the Sudanese gov drops bombs - that's because Sudanese gov wants to wipe out the people receiving aid.
Just do a google search on Sudan bombs food.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/fro
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And very often in other places the people in power steal the food and resell it.
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Over here often there is a chicken glut, and some farmers actually _burn_ the chickens
Other countries farmers pour milk onto the fields etcetc.
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In the old days when farmers have a great harvest they throw a celebration. Now they throw the harvest!
Re:Will that really work? (Score:1)
We need to have a GPL for biology, genetics, biochemistry, geology, chemistry, engineering, ad nauseum. Without the fundamental right to have a scientific infrastrusture these coutries wane in and out of existance like flickers in the face of civilization. How did it become ours to judge the worthiness of fellow man in such a contradictory way? In one instance of our "justice" we allow such technology to flourish as the principal crop sown in the fields of our hallowed intellectual disciplines, and along even further from anything encroachable we enshrine the efficacy of desire when we sow deep the culture of opulance as reward for treachery directed deep at the roots of freedom.
Make no mistake the industrial revolution may have obliviated the need for ethnic hatred that bred the likes of the master and slave economy; this monster we have unleashed is far more able to be brutish beyond bounds of any compassion.
Re:Will that really work? (Score:2)
Re:Will that really work? (Score:1)
Are these your own thoughts, or are you part of or subscribe to an organization that has more information? Do you have a website that I can visit?
I'm not trying to be a troll or anything. I just am torn between defending capitalism and the USA and other developed countries, and the need for humanity which sometimes seems to fly right in the face of the ideals this country functions on today.
Re:Organic farming or . . . (Score:1)
Or how about stopping the promotion of global agri-monoculture and helping them bring back the native crops that work in drought conditions, defeats local varmints, etcetera.
GM crops are not only an environmental disaster waiting to happen (since plants and their pollen have this annoying habit of spreading outside where your plant them), and a corporate bastards' wet dream of controlling global food supplies, they are a solution in search of a problem.
Take this "golden rice" [grain.org] bullshit. The areas they're hyping to grow this stuff already have native crops that provide plenty of vitamin A [oreilly.com] - but these crops are being squeezed out by globalized agriculture.
Pesticide math? (Score:2)
How does that work? I thought organic farming used NO pesticides, not 3% of the pesticides. Can someone clarify?
Re:Pesticide math? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Pesticide math? (Score:3, Informative)
Organic farming has now been defined by the FDA. There's a big list of what you can and cannot do as an organic farmer. If you wish to call your produce 'organic' you must submit to onsite inspections, follow all the FDA guidelines, and get certified every year at a minimum cost of several thousand dollars. In other words, organic is now Big Business.
I was an organic farmer. I now grow 'farm fresh', 'wholesome' and 'traditional' foods, as I have been shoved out of the organic field by the FDA's rulings. I can't afford the certification, so, I can't use the organic term which the FDA decided it owns.
another possibility... (Score:1)
I have no idea if that is the case. I just wanted to illustrate that the lack of completeness in the statistics could swing the argument either way.
The same goes for your lawn (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:The same goes for your lawn (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Bullshit (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Bullshit (Score:2)
or did you think all you had to do was throw seeds into some dirt and it will grow, without any help whatsoever?
an organic fFarm -- that is, a place which is built on the idea of fFarming en masse -- will probably have several compost depots. these will be mounds of dirt and decomposing leaves and sticks and such. this is generally considered organic (although the pursit will sift throuhg everything in their compost to take out what might not pass)
Is this labor-intensive? (Score:3, Insightful)
Who is going to be out there doing the labor? How many more field workers does it take? Where are they going to come from?
Somebody wants to do this for a living: (Score:2, Interesting)
I do this for a living. I really enjoy it too. I also code for a living. The two nicely complement each other, and allow me an enormous amount of freedom.
There are probably quite a few other people who would be willing to do farmwork if our society valued the work. We don't, so they don't. Hard to fault them such as it is.
Re:Somebody wants to do this for a living: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Somebody wants to do this for a living: (Score:1)
Subsistence farming is a hard hard life, I'm sure starving in a city is too. Perhaps it's simply this; once the farmer and his family have left the land, they can't go back for a variety of reasons, whether they would wish to or not.
As I said above, this society denegrates (to a certain extent) the idea of working with one's hands. If I introduced myself as a farmer, what would your image be of me? What if I introduced myself as a PhD (which I will be soon)? Or a programmer in C and Python? The different assumptions each introduction engenders are quite telling, and yet I'm all three. So perhaps the idea that peasants must be choosing to live in a city is less a truism about them, and more a truism about us.
Re:Somebody wants to do this for a living: (Score:2, Interesting)
That's all well and good, but the economy of wheat production is an unstable affair. Many smaller farm operations (ummm, less than 1000 acres) literally "bet the farm" every year. Usually, it's a fairly safe bet. The costs and cashflow are unlike those of other businesses. A new 4WD tractor from John Deere or Case can pull an unbelievable number/size of ploughs or drills and allow 1 or 2 people to work all that land, but they cost more than the farmer's house. During the planting and growing seasons, there is *no income*. You borrow from the bank.
When June/July rolls around, the yield must be just right. If the yield is too low, you may find it difficult to finance the next crop. If the yield is very high on average (not just your farm), the selling price will nosedive and you may find it difficult to finance the next crop.
The costs associated with planting, growing and harvesting are fairly well understood. An infestation of pests is guaranteed to reduce your income. Let alone, your yield will be too low. Hiring a cropduster and paying for the chemicals is money right out of the bank.
Organic gardening methods, which I practice in my 0.125 acre vegatable garden, just don't scale to "feed the world" proportions.
Re:Somebody wants to do this for a living: (Score:1)
The label protects consumers from businesses passing off their produce as organic when it isn't. It also protects businesses from any sort of challenge by smaller family farmers, by effectively pricing them out of the ability to use the label. It doesn't matter really; my customers know what I can produce, what it tastes like, how it looks, the freshness of it, and they choose it over the big business' organic produce. Is this a model for most of agriculture? I don't know. It's proving ground has just really begun.
Re:Is this labor-intensive? (Score:2)
actually, it is my understanding in fFact this is actually easier on labour. instead of laying fFertilizers 5 times a year, they are only doing it twice a year, and then the loads are lighter and work more on their own.
fFor example, a load (so to speak) of manure sits quietly on the dirt and sinks into the soil. as opposed to chemicalstuff, which has to be replenished regularly to keep active. or something of this nature.
Re:Is this labor-intensive? (Score:1)
Hmmm (Score:2)
TACO STRIKES AGAIN (Score:1)
"Don't try to outweird me, three-eyes. I get stranger things than you free with my breakfast cereal." - Zaphod Beeblebrox in "Hithiker's Guide to the Galaxy"
has a typo. IT IS REALLY SAD that taco and company have seen fit to edit the quotes to their own standard of typoing. alas :(
Pesticide free works for myself (Score:3, Interesting)
Now, for my garden, I've ditched the pesticides. After doing some research on the potato beetle, I found out that they quickly become resistant to one pesticide, unless you continuously use different type of pesticides (this explains my father failing to control them.)
My solution? I control the bug by hand. Once a week I examine the plants and squish and kill all the egg clusters, larva, and adults that I find. This keeps the population managable to the point that predators of the potato beetle keep things under control. This method works very well.
I don't expect that large farms can invest in this much labor, but for my home garden this is a good solution. Oh, large farms also use other pesticide-free methods to control the beetle, such as plastic lined trenchs that catch and trap the bug.
Devils Advocate (Score:4, Interesting)
pesticide use by 97%,
For the record, I
But.
I have to wonder about how sustainable the non-use of pesticides can be.
Think about human vaccinations against childhood diseases. Overall, it's a great idea. On an individual basis, if everyone else's child has been vaccinated, then you can forego the risks of vaccination, secure in knowing that your child will probably play only with other vaccinated children that will not subject your child to those diseases. Also, by not vaccinating your child, you don't suffer the one in several hundred thousand risk that your child will actually get sick. Great.
Great, until more and more other parents also decide that they don't like the risks of vaccination on their children, either. Then you end up with a sufficient pool of unvaccinated children, where there is increased risk that the diseases will take hold and be communicated in that group.
Is it not similar to an organic farmer sitting in the middle of California's Central Valley, with all his neighbors using all manner of ugly pesticides to effectively sterilize their fields? The small organic farmer has little to worry about: he's not going to catch any pests from his neighbors.
You see my point. At some critical level of non-use of pesticides, the pests will start to propagate much more than they do now.
Organic Markets (Score:1)
There are very good reasons that we use pesticides and fertilizer and they have nothing to do with "conspiracies." It all comes down to growing crops cheaper so you can make money in a competitive system.
If organic was actually cheaper, I guarantee you the farmers would have found out a long time ago.
brad
Re:Organic Markets (Score:2)
fFirstly, supply and demand. it's quite likely you eat more or less organic fFood without knowing it. but when people put a little label on it, this makes it really worth something. so the price goes up.
and because people are willing to pay the premiums. people like to fFeel like they are getting more than they are getting. my mother in law will eat only organics if she can. and she maintains my next point.
the fFood is simply better fFor you. the yeild may be less, but it is a higher quality. so the price actually is higher fFor the higher value. to put this into more common terms, compare Mcdonalds with the Ritz Steak House. the ritz makes more money per meal, because the price is higher. but not everyone eats at the ritz all the time. sometimes ya just wanna crummy burger and fFries. or its all you can afford right then. likewise, organic has a higher payout fFrom a higher price fFor higher quality fFood. but not everyone is willing/able to buy the better stuff.
Re:Organic Markets (Score:1)
Because industrialized agriculture gets to exernalize much of its costs.
If argibusiness had to pay for all the soil erosion, pesticide and fertilizer run-off, medical costs of pesticide-contaminated food, et cetera; and if big farms didn't have massive subsidies for water; and if we all paid the true price for a gallon of fuel, including enviromental costs and military costs to keep the oil flowing; then it would be obvious that the true cost of organic agriculture is much lower.
But until we have an economic system with some basis in reality when it comes to natural resources, you'll have to take all this into account yourself.
Not that it matters, since the thread is dead... (Score:1)
Re:Not that it matters, since the thread is dead.. (Score:1)
You can generally find me somewhere between the Greens and the Libertarians, hanging around with the libertarian socialists and Zenarchists. :-)
I used to use the "DuckDogers" nick playing QuakeWorld.
Organic farming producing LESS? (Score:1)
(The difference was largely attributed to crop rotation being used in organic farming, leading to the soil becomming less 'exhausted' than on a single-crop scheme)
Here's one...
http://www.projectcensored.org/stories/20
.
Lies, Damn Lies, and Statistics (Score:1, Interesting)
Initial response: Wow! 97, 34, and 53 are big numbers, and 20 is a smaller number.
Reasoned Response: Time for a little algebra. Say 'g' is the gross income from crop sales (yield * price per bushel), and 'p' is the total cost of pesticides, fertilizers, energy, etc. in a conventional farm. so:
(1*g - 1*p) is the amount of money left over after paying for pesticides, etc. in conventional farming
Let's say that organic farming results in a 60% decrease in total costs of energy, fertilizer, pesticides etc. (60% is a round number near the average [61.3] of 34, 53 and 97 %) so:
(0.8*g - 0.6*p) is the amount of money left over after paying for pesticides, etc. in organic farming.
Let's compute the "break even" point for the percentage of pesticide costs as a fraction of gross profits.
1*g - 1*p = 0.8*g - 0.6*p
0.2*g = 0.4*p
p = 0.5*g
So in order to make a switch to organic farming economical for a farmer, the cost of pesticides, fertilizer and energy has to account for at least 50% of the *GROSS* income, leaving less than half to take care of the morgage payments on the land, the cost of seed, morgage on the machinery, machine maintainence, cost of hired help, taxes, living expenses for the farmer's family, etc.
The savings would be nice, but I doubt farmers spend the majority of their income on fetilizer, pesticides and energy.
Re:Lies, Damn Lies, and Statistics (Score:2)
http://science.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=33492
although i think mine sounds like simpler english, you have nicely asked what i was struggling to get at. the basic actual math of the loss/gain difference.
at any rate, all this doesnt mean they are "lying", per se, just not giving us all the data. consider, what is the time difference involved, or more specifically, the labour-pay rates. (are organic methods more/less labour intensive, or do they require a more/less skilled hand, which would require more/less pay?)
this is a great study. but this article alone doesnt give anywhere near enough data to convert an entire industry.
Junk Science Debunked (Score:1)
But let's delve deeper into the actual methodology. How big was the plot of land that they studied. One would assume that they would devote several hundred acres so that minor local anomalies would skew their results. Well, one would be wrong. The plot was about 3.5 acres. And what about the "ecological benefits" that make the smaller yields palatable? How was this actually measured? Did they look at chemical content in the earth? How about in the crops? No, they counted the number of worms and insects. How is that ecologically meaningful, especially with such a small sample size?
While there is a need for greater efficiency in the chemicals and methods of modern day farming, this "study" proves nothing. If anything, it shows that anyone who buys "organic" crops is getting ripped off. After all, if "organic" farming is so much more efficient (get a load of how they caculated that!) why do they cost more at the store!?
This [junkscience.com], and other garbage science, is debunked on a regular basis at JunkScience.com [junkscience.com]
Re:Junk Science Debunked (Score:1)
The same way a car that is more "fuel-efficient" costs more than one that is not. The study used efficiency in the proper, (energy-input)/(product output) sense. This has nothing to do with economics, it's called "science". Go read a highschool physics textbook and get back to us.
Re:Junk Science Debunked (Score:1)
Re:Junk Science Debunked (Score:1)
Re:Junk Science Debunked (Score:2)
Sustainability is the only issue (Score:2)
Agriculture is an ~8,000 year old undertaking. Most of the changes in agriculture have occured in the last hundred years. In that time much of the arable land has been developed or paved over. We have increasing food production demands and a decreasing quantity of land with which to produce food on. Hence the need for food science.
Brief segue: I read an article online [maybe here?] about research for food/air/water/waste systems for a mission to Mars. The major requirement is that the systems on the spaceship must use the waste from the other systems to minimize resources used and to keep the human cargo alive for the entire trip. Planet earth can be thought of as a space ship--and it has [bfi.org]--and that puts everthing into a more clear perspective.
Will our spaceship be able to sustain its human cargo? Our current system of chemo-geneto-monoculture guarantees high yields for now, but has problems of its own. For example, monoculture requires high levels of fertilizers. Most chemical fertilizers have a chloride content in the teens percentagewise--eventually the salt content in the soil will become high enough to render the soil infertile. The lack of rotting organic matter in the soil causes the soil to hold very little water, which calls for additives to increase water holding. Other posters have pointed out the production costs which are borne by the rest of society--such as fertilizer runoff and cross breeding by GM crops--so I won't elaborate on that. There is also the practice of using Roundup-ready GM crops which can survive high doses of that product. What happens to that soil once the GM crops are banned or if Monsanto pulls the plug on that product? The soil becomes poisonous and incapable of growing any crops.
There is only one system of agriculture that employs sustainability in the heart of its philosophy: organic. Yes, it is labor intensive. Yes, it is expensive. However it does appear to be the only way to travel. Call me a hippy or engage in whatever ad hominem attack that your threatened sensibilities deem necessary, but don't raid my crops when your farming methods fail.
Have a rebuttal, Mr. AC (Score:2)
It isn't effective for long, but still toxic. Don't forget runoff and the other costs to society that you "non-nutbar" types conveniently leave out of your analysis.
Sorry, bud--I already do! Really, your cynicism prevents you from thinking objectively. You are being angry with me because our society doesn't value farm labor but [for example...] pays people thousands of dollars a day to model clothing in front of a camera.