The New York Times
January 5, 2009
A 50-Year Farm Bill
By WES JACKSON and WENDELL BERRY

THE extraordinary rainstorms last June caused catastrophic soil
erosion in the grain lands of Iowa, where there were gullies 200
feet wide. But even worse damage is done over the long term under
normal rainfall -- by the little rills and sheets of erosion on
incompletely covered or denuded cropland, and by various
degradations resulting from industrial procedures and technologies
alien to both agriculture and nature.

Soil that is used and abused in this way is as nonrenewable as
(and far more valuable than) oil. Unlike oil, it has no
technological substitute -- and no powerful friends in the halls
of government.

Agriculture has too often involved an insupportable abuse and
waste of soil, ever since the first farmers took away the
soil-saving cover and roots of perennial plants. Civilizations
have destroyed themselves by destroying their farmland. This
irremediable loss, never enough noticed, has been made worse by
the huge monocultures and continuous soil-exposure of the
agriculture we now practice.

To the problem of soil loss, the industrialization of agriculture
has added pollution by toxic chemicals, now universally present in
our farmlands and streams. Some of this toxicity is associated
with the widely acclaimed method of minimum tillage. We should not
poison our soils to save them.

Industrial agricultural has made our food supply entirely
dependent on fossil fuels and, by substituting technological
"solutions" for human work and care, has virtually destroyed the
cultures of husbandry (imperfect as they may have been) once
indigenous to family farms and farming neighborhoods.

Clearly, our present ways of agriculture are not sustainable, and
so our food supply is not sustainable. We must restore ecological
health to our agricultural landscapes, as well as economic and
cultural stability to our rural communities.

For 50 or 60 years, we have let ourselves believe that as long as
we have money we will have food. That is a mistake. If we continue
our offenses against the land and the labor by which we are fed,
the food supply will decline, and we will have a problem far more
complex than the failure of our paper economy. The government will
bring forth no food by providing hundreds of billons of dollars to
the agribusiness corporations.

Any restorations will require, above all else, a substantial
increase in the acreages of perennial plants. The most immediately
practicable way of doing this is to go back to crop rotations that
include hay, pasture and grazing animals.

But a more radical response is necessary if we are to keep eating
and preserve our land at the same time. In fact, research in
Canada, Australia, China and the United States over the last 30
years suggests that perennialization of the major grain crops like
wheat, rice, sorghum and sunflowers can be developed in the
foreseeable future. By increasing the use of mixtures of
grain-bearing perennials, we can better protect the soil and
substantially reduce greenhouse gases, fossil-fuel use and toxic
pollution.

Carbon sequestration would increase, and the husbandry of water
and soil nutrients would become much more efficient. And with an
increase in the use of perennial plants and grazing animals would
come more employment opportunities in agriculture -- provided, of
course, that farmers would be paid justly for their work and their
goods.

Thoughtful farmers and consumers everywhere are already making
many necessary changes in the production and marketing of
food. But we also need a national agricultural policy that is
based upon ecological principles. We need a 50-year farm bill that
addresses forthrightly the problems of soil loss and degradation,
toxic pollution, fossil-fuel dependency and the destruction of
rural communities.

This is a political issue, certainly, but it far transcends the
farm politics we are used to. It is an issue as close to every one
of us as our own stomachs.

==

Wes Jackson is a plant geneticist and president of The Land
Institute in Salina, Kan. Wendell Berry is a farmer and writer in
Port Royal, Ky.

_______________________________________________
For more information about sustainability in the Tompkins County area, please 
visit:  http://www.sustainabletompkins.org/ 

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