Earthworm · @earthworm
445 followers · 1675 posts · Server kolektiva.social

While I endorse totally being more sustainable agricultural practices a key part of the puzzle on how to solve the multiple crisis we are facing, I am one of the serious looking guys that always call for caution with the hyperbolic claims.

Many people in the community grossly exagerate its potential to attract funding and popularity.
It could be argued that this is ok, since RegAg is definitely an improvement compared to what we have now, but there are several biophysical limitations that will not allow RegAg alone to save the world.

a) in order to apply large amounts of compost, first you need to produce a lot of biomass.
b) Soil Organic Matter (SOM) is not a stable thing. It degrades progressi ely after some decades (yes, there are claims that "with RegAg-technique X SOM gets stabilized", but they didn't study this in long-term experiments)
c) in agriculture, there is no one-size-fits-all. E.g. if you wonder why in warmer, drier climates there is little SOM, it might be for some reason and not only because of bad agricultural practices.
d) Regenerative Agriculture needs to strengthen the focus on social and economic issues. Team up with the movement, as only an will give farmers the structure to achieve while caring the planet.

So, promote Regenerative Agriculture, but be careful with the claims, as it won't help if in some years people will identify us as liars having promised too much.

Sorry for being boring 🤓

@exador23 @donkeyherder

#RegenerativeAgriculture #regag #agroecology #ecosocialTransformation #FoodSovereignity

Last updated 1 year ago

Earthworm · @earthworm
437 followers · 1641 posts · Server kolektiva.social

[This is a low-quality translation of a danish article of the newspaper information]

-- Larger, faster, wilder: A farm country's victory is killed --

The Netherlands has the world's most advanced and successful industrial farming. No one can grow a tomato more efficiently, and no one sends more meat around Europe. Now the nature stops.

WAGENINGEN, HOLLAND – Central in the Atlas Building at Wageningen University stands a young woman at a small podium and reads high from the latest climate report. She doesn't cry, the voice is not raised, her little protest summer as a mouse in the big floor.

Around her sit African, Asian and Dutch students. Some eat lunch, some make homework, some speak together with a cup of coffee. Some are as her highly concerned about the climate crisis, others are more admitted by what you have always been admitted to the Wageningen University: to optimise, streamline and increase production. Develop new technologies that enable us to force the most possible food out of at least possible soil with at least possible effort. Grise with several ribs, cows with greater udders, plants with many tomatoes.

The famous University is one of the sacred halls of the industrial farming. A cathedral over the borderless progress and a crucial part of what until a few years ago was considered an unconditional Dutch success story.

The Netherlands is a small country, less than Denmark, but one of the world's leading agricultural nation. Non-organic vegetables or the non-organic beef in the supermarket, are often produced in the Netherlands. No one can cultivate as many tomatoes, cucumbers or peppers per square metres as the Dutch. No one sends more meat around Europe. And no places have food production less common with Jens Hansen’s farm. Dutch agriculture is a science. It is milking robots, vertical cultivation and fully automatic greenhouses.

Last year the Netherlands earned more money with agricultural exports than Brazil. A country that is otherwise more than 200 times as big. In certain statements, the Netherlands is the second largest exporter of food, surpassed only by the United States. However, it requires that you also count the products that simply arrive in Rotterdam port to be distributed beyond Europe.

But no matter how to do it, the Dutch produce almost unlogical amounts of food. It is a high-tech power performance that has grown out of the Wageningen University, which has now established itself as the global center of the food industry. Food Valley calls the cluster of companies located around the university. The answers to Silicon Valley.

For more than 100 years, and in particular after World War II, Dutch agriculture has gone from victory to victory under the motto greater, wilder, faster. In recent years there has been a pressure to get it down again.

“Please, the list two the science and ACT,” stands at the podium in front of the young woman. Behind her has a statue of the Greek corn god Demeter from 1879 got a tie for her eyes. It is also part of a climate action.

I was actually well warned that the climate activists were moved behind enemy lines. Over the phone a pleasant farmer and former student named Judith told me that Wageningen once was a fantastic institution, but that I should fit:

“The hand is also a part of professors who are, what to say, vegan.’

And students, apparently.

“Polarization has also reached Wageningen,” says the person from the University’s press staff, Jan Bol – a mid-age man with a friendly, round head.

“A lot is going on about climate, about how we feed people. Some students think we do too little, the peasants think we do too much,” he says.

In other words: Here in the Atlas building you are not doubt that agriculture is also in the Netherlands on a cross road. You can continue with full speed towards bigger, wilder and faster. Or you can change it all, cut down on meat production and produce with more sustainable and less profitable methods. You can also try to make a little of it all at once.

- Dutch-Danish recipe for success -

Krijn Poppe is not vegan. He was employed at the University of 1981, when the progress still had free races. In fact, there were departments for both sociology and environment.

“You just didn’t listen to them,” says it now retired agricultural farmers.

It was perhaps stupid, but it is obviously easy to say now.

The Netherlands emits too much nitrogen. It strangles the streams, pollutes the groundwater, and destroys biodiversity. And it is completely considered the production of agricultural animals. Of course, they are about four million Dutch cattle significant contributions to the country’s CO2 budget. Over half of the discharges from the global food industry come from the animal production, a large study for a few years ago. Just like some years ago, we hopefully about peak oil – that oil production had to have the top – you are now talking about peak meat.

» We have far more agricultural animals than the climate can hold and the problem is the intensity of agriculture,” said one of the researchers behind the study, Pete Smith, to The Guardian earlier this year.

“I’m not surprised that the Netherlands is first in this conflict, because the country also has the biggest problem. «

The battle does not mention well. In fact, it was an alien political conflict, which this month finally became the government to break together. But the coalition has long been collapsed during the weight of the last year's massive resistance to the plans to reduce the number of agricultural animals and thus live up to the EU environmental requirements.

» An inevitable transition,” the government has called it. Nevertheless, it is still not managed to implement plans. On the contrary, it has been pushed out of balance. Huge protests, burning strawballs, political division, intense polarization between country and city.

And for what? To save a farm that might be technological world-leading, but which no longer means more for the economy than 1.4 percent of bnp.

It is easy to say that you should have listened to the warnings that sociologs and environmental researchers once tried to penetrate with. And it is easy to say that the Dutch should now take large parts of the strong polluting agriculture.

- The Dutch created the Netherlands -

In the sense there is a part of the collapse between the Netherlands and Denmark, Krijn Poppe tells. Two countries with many of the same problems – two countries that have gone into the same trap if you want. Two agricultural countries who are victoring themselves. To understand the trouble we are now in, you should also understand how we did end here, Poppe believes.

Denmark and the Netherlands have largely followed the same historical curve. When globalisation hit agriculture last in the 1800s, you could not as France and Germany turn inwards and protect its peasants against cheap American grains. The home market was too small. The Netherlands and Denmark were – and are – small, open export economies.

» They did the only thing you can do when the whole economy is bound to sell food abroad: They repented, they competed, they innovated,” he says.

Whipped to produce better and cheaper than the others, agricultural universities and research institutes were opened. The award in the Netherlands, Landboskole in Denmark. Governments supported the development of new technologies. Today you might call the industrial policy. With the andels movement, agriculture was organised in greater communities with higher productivity. Especially in the Netherlands there was also what you can call an agroindustrial complex. Rabobank is still one of the world's largest agricultural banks. Unilever is still one of the world’s largest food companies. FrieslandCampina is still one of the world's largest dairy. Everyone can draw their roots to the end of the 1800s, and all they have with great success and for great pleasure for ordinary Dutchmen followed the recipe: bigger, wilder, faster.

It is called that God created the earth, but the Dutch created the world. Nearby as a giant Lynetteholm project (an artificial island in Copenhague) is just 20 percent of the country mass established in the sea. With great effort, you have cultivated the true soil in the east. An area that corresponds to half times Manhattan is covered by giant Drishus complexes – small towns of glass.

Today, the Dutch can cultivate up to 100 kilos of tomatoes per year on a single square meter, and every milk cow gives average nearly 10,000 liters of milk per year.

The goal of bnp may only contribute with quite small numbers, but the high-tech agriculture has a symbolic force. It is the monument to the fact that the Netherlands with particularly great success has championed nature and bolted in the modernity. The Netherlands is a agricultural country.
Intelligent solutions

Just because nature has now come back to revenge, of course, you can not say that the Dutch must necessarily turn the back to the modernity, technology and demand to optimise. As it applies in all corners of the green transition, the technology is in its way both the cause and the solution to the problems.

Although the enemy has penetrated the Wageningen, even if Demeter has been given a tie for the eyes, and the IPCC report sums around the Atlas building, the University is not marked by ambitions to return to a more traditional before state-of-the-art agriculture.

[1/2]

information.dk/udland/2023/07/

#agroecology #agriculture #ClimateChange #nitrogenpollution #dutchfarming #IndustrialAgriculture #netherlands #dutch #dairy #farming #euagriculture #foodsecurity #FoodSovereignity #smartagriculture

Last updated 1 year ago

Earthworm · @earthworm
437 followers · 1641 posts · Server kolektiva.social

Modern GMOs just accelerated what white humans did in the 1960s with the industrialization of agriculture.

Please, be aware that hunger is not a problem that will be solved by "GMOs=more food=less hunger".

This is cheap corporate technocratic propaganda🤨

We live a world where the largest prevalence of hunger is among the rural poor (=smallholder farmers), even in regions like Latin America, the worlds largest food exporting region, where 1 in 4 people experience food insecurity.

grain.org/en/article/6964-hung

Hunger has to do with access and is an economic and social problem. By advocating to use (expensive) technology to increase the agricultural production, you harm the hungry children of smallholder farmers.
After the revolution, we can talk about GMOs, but until then, they won't serve the interests of the poor.

The food system and agricultural economics sucks and is complex. Sorry.

The solution?
-> support resilient, agroecological smallholder farmers to achieve food sovereignity.
-> Ask grassroot organizations of the global south* what they think about how to solve the hunger and environmental crisis. (e.g. viacampesina.org/en/la-via-cam)

* oh, and they are really critical of western "environmentalism" and "certified organic agriculture" and stuff.

@kkarhan @MisuseCase @AnarchoNinaWrites

#agroecology #ViaCampesina #gmos #FoodSovereignity #foodsecurity #hunger

Last updated 1 year ago

Earthworm · @earthworm
412 followers · 1506 posts · Server kolektiva.social

Yeah, never a good thing when food is used as a geopolitical weapon...

Just wanted to note that a large part of the exported grain is used to feed the pigs.
It's not Ukraine's fault. Has more to do with shitty global food systems and that the subsidized industrisl farms in Europe can pay a higher price than the hungry poor in the global south.
Still, indirectly, Ukraine's grain export lower the world market price slightly. But also this needs to be taken with a pinch of salt, as cheap grain allows the urban poor access to food, while driving smallscale farmers into bankrupcy. 🙁

The solution?

, and . Supporting and the .

For the war: Give Ukraine long range precision missiles to take out Russian logistics. This would even make it unnecessary to massacre Russian convicts and mobiks with horrible cluster bombs 😢

@matthewtoad43

#agroecology #FoodSovereignity #peasantagriculture #foodtransition

Last updated 1 year ago

GalenT · @galent
44 followers · 253 posts · Server mastodon.sdf.org

Eating from the garden: raspberries. First year transplants giving a few berries.


#localfood #gardening #FoodSovereignity

Last updated 1 year ago

GalenT · @galent
44 followers · 252 posts · Server mastodon.sdf.org

Eating from the garden: shishito pepper - first of the year.


#localfood #growyourown #FoodSovereignity

Last updated 1 year ago

GalenT · @galent
43 followers · 248 posts · Server mastodon.sdf.org

Eating from the garden - sugar snap peas.


#FoodSovereignity #seedsaving

Last updated 1 year ago

Gary · @empiricism
333 followers · 2343 posts · Server qoto.org

Vision

"Our guiding vision for sustainable prosperity is one in which people everywhere have the capability to flourish as human beings—within the ecological and resource constraints of a finite planet. A prosperous society is concerned not only with income and financial wealth, but also with the health and wellbeing of its citizens". cusp.ac.uk/about/

#science #agroecology #foodculture #CommunityFood #foodtalks #righttofood #foodfarming #togetherwegrow #livelifeontheveg #FoodSovereignity #localfood #regenerativeagriculture #postgrowth #manchesterfood #ecology #foodcitizen #foodfutures #foodsystem #sustainablefarming #vegrevolution

Last updated 1 year ago

CUSP :unverified: · @cusp_uk
782 followers · 66 posts · Server mstdn.social
Earthworm · @earthworm
206 followers · 290 posts · Server kolektiva.social

@Ragnarsson

Busca p.e. por los hashtags

Ahi encontraràs vuentas x seguir.

#agroecologia #agroecology #FoodSovereignity

Last updated 1 year ago

Earthworm · @earthworm
206 followers · 290 posts · Server kolektiva.social

The green revolution was really a success.
Especially for agribusiness (fertilizers, pesticides, seeds) and meat industry in the global north (cheap foodstuff).

Regarding the effect on economic and social wellbeing of the rural population and the effects on the environment (soil and water quality, greenhouse gas emissions), the data is not so positive:

doi.org/10.3389/fsufs.2021.644

doi.org/10.1080/03066150420002

The follow-up, Africa's Green Revolution, doesn't look better.

axelkra.us/wp-content/uploads/

iatp.org/agra-still-failing-af

Although I appreciate billionaire philantrophists and their technocratic ideology failing, it is smallholder farmers' suffering.


@greenaspen @failedLyndonLaRouchite

#agroecology #FoodSovereignity #ViaCampesina

Last updated 1 year ago

Davva · @Davva23
20 followers · 98 posts · Server todon.nl
Indigenous Food Sovereignty · @IndigenousFoodSov
493 followers · 91 posts · Server toot.io
jo · @dreadwomyn
66 followers · 25 posts · Server mastodon.nz

The best and most enlightening question you can ask your local food bank right now is
1 -when do they close for summer,
2 -when they reopen and
3-how can people access food in between those dates?

#NZTwits #food #colonial #FoodSovereignity #livableincomes #charity

Last updated 2 years ago

James J. A. Blair · @jjablair
165 followers · 20 posts · Server mstdn.social

Today I am excited to host a virtual guest lecture by Dr. Matthew Canfield, author of Translating Food Sovereignty: Cultivating Justice in an Age of Transnational Governance. Join us!

#anthrodons #anthropology #FoodSovereignity

Last updated 2 years ago

James J. A. Blair · @jjablair
336 followers · 35 posts · Server mstdn.social

Today I am excited to host a virtual guest lecture by Dr. Matthew Canfield, author of Translating Food Sovereignty: Cultivating Justice in an Age of Transnational Governance. Join us!

#anthrodons #anthropology #FoodSovereignity

Last updated 2 years ago

Emelien Devos · @sjanep
47 followers · 10 posts · Server climatejustice.social

@anthropology
Hi fellow anthropologists

I seem to have trouble tagging this group, so let me try it this way

Happy to join this space and seeing the migration gaining force

time

I am a Belgium based Environmental Anthropologist working on changing foodways in Western Tanzania. My research focuses on how notions of 'the natural' figure in concerns about 'new diseases caused by new foods' and how this relates to conservation borders and agricultural transformation.

I am searching for ways to connect and ethnography and interested in all things , , , , .

research.flw.ugent.be/en/emeli

#TwitterMigration #Introduction #PoliticalEcology #multispecies #medanthro #FoodAnthro #EnvAnthro #FoodSovereignity #conservation

Last updated 2 years ago

Emelien Devos · @sjanep
47 followers · 10 posts · Server climatejustice.social

Hi @ecologies and @anthroplogy folks,
Happy to join this space and seeing the migration gaining force

time

I am a Belgium based Environmental Anthropologist working on changing foodways in Western Tanzania. My research focuses on how notions of 'the natural' figure in concerns about 'new diseases caused by new foods' and how this relates to conservation borders and agricultural transformation.

I am searching for ways to connect and ethnography and interested in all things , , , , .

research.flw.ugent.be/en/emeli

#twitter #Introduction #PoliticalEcology #multispecies #medanthro #FoodAnthro #EnvAnthro #FoodSovereignity #conservation

Last updated 2 years ago

annfinster · @annfinster
15 followers · 210 posts · Server mastodon.sdf.org
Matt Noyes · @Matt_Noyes
508 followers · 8571 posts · Server social.coop

It's gonna be a two picture presentation. Here's no. 1

#FoodSovereignity

Last updated 4 years ago