The future isn't in pure organic, as it is the least sustainable method(feel free to prove me wrong).
The future isn't in more chemicals because the consumer says so, and it speaking with his/her grocery dollar.
I believe there is a middle ground, but that it would require a lot of PR to get the consumer on side. Partially organic, but more importantly, the most sustainable methods possible. Convince the consumer that fertilizer is a necessary evil, at least until we disprove the laws of thermodynamics. Convince the consumer that soil loss, OM loss and nutrient loss are the most important measures of sustainability. Convince the consumer that the methods which use the least energy(diesel fuel typically) are the most beneficial to the environment and soil. Convince the consumer that GMO products have the potential to reduce the amount or severity of chemical applied, plus a host of other potential benefits.
Now this is starting to sound a lot like conventional no, or min till agriculture. But where the compromise comes in, is all of the scary sounding chemicals. Perhaps offer products that are free of chems for xx days before harvesting(no preharvest, no chems after head/pod/seed emergence), or not sprayed in crop, but still allow pre seed and post harvest.
Whether we like it or not, these things will eventually be forced upon us, and likely not backed by any logic or science. THey will take away all the tools in our toolboxes, the good with the bad. We need to take the initiative and offer a product that is as sustainable and environmentally neutral as possible, and convince the consumer that this is the only way to feed the world for generations to come. Before we are all regulated and relegated back to stone age methods, and we all starve as a result.
If the organic product is multiple times the conventional, and looks worse, but there is a product inbetween which is guaranteed to be applied chemical free, and lists the sustainable practices used, for negligibly more cost than the conventional, I think consumers would make a reasonable choice.
The producer would also have a choice. Rather than loose his crop to pests, he can spray a late season insecticide, fungicide or even herbicide, sell as conventional and not sacrifice the 5 years of chemical free status which has been built up for organic. On years when it works, sell it as chemical free. And unlike the unverifiable scam that is most organic foods, this is provable, chemical residual tests are readily available. We give up some of our tools, in exchange for a better price, but still have access to the tools when economics dictate. Then let both the consumer and the producer vote with their wallets.
There is nothing sustainable about intense tillage to allow erosion and OM lost, mining nutrients, or losing a crop to a pest when a solution exists. Even if the consumer sees an organic label and thinks that it is somehow more sustainable, environmentally friendlier and healthier. However, I fully support anyone who is willing to produce for this market, after all, the consumer is never wrong, and if you can make more money filling this need, more power to you.
The future isn't in more chemicals because the consumer says so, and it speaking with his/her grocery dollar.
I believe there is a middle ground, but that it would require a lot of PR to get the consumer on side. Partially organic, but more importantly, the most sustainable methods possible. Convince the consumer that fertilizer is a necessary evil, at least until we disprove the laws of thermodynamics. Convince the consumer that soil loss, OM loss and nutrient loss are the most important measures of sustainability. Convince the consumer that the methods which use the least energy(diesel fuel typically) are the most beneficial to the environment and soil. Convince the consumer that GMO products have the potential to reduce the amount or severity of chemical applied, plus a host of other potential benefits.
Now this is starting to sound a lot like conventional no, or min till agriculture. But where the compromise comes in, is all of the scary sounding chemicals. Perhaps offer products that are free of chems for xx days before harvesting(no preharvest, no chems after head/pod/seed emergence), or not sprayed in crop, but still allow pre seed and post harvest.
Whether we like it or not, these things will eventually be forced upon us, and likely not backed by any logic or science. THey will take away all the tools in our toolboxes, the good with the bad. We need to take the initiative and offer a product that is as sustainable and environmentally neutral as possible, and convince the consumer that this is the only way to feed the world for generations to come. Before we are all regulated and relegated back to stone age methods, and we all starve as a result.
If the organic product is multiple times the conventional, and looks worse, but there is a product inbetween which is guaranteed to be applied chemical free, and lists the sustainable practices used, for negligibly more cost than the conventional, I think consumers would make a reasonable choice.
The producer would also have a choice. Rather than loose his crop to pests, he can spray a late season insecticide, fungicide or even herbicide, sell as conventional and not sacrifice the 5 years of chemical free status which has been built up for organic. On years when it works, sell it as chemical free. And unlike the unverifiable scam that is most organic foods, this is provable, chemical residual tests are readily available. We give up some of our tools, in exchange for a better price, but still have access to the tools when economics dictate. Then let both the consumer and the producer vote with their wallets.
There is nothing sustainable about intense tillage to allow erosion and OM lost, mining nutrients, or losing a crop to a pest when a solution exists. Even if the consumer sees an organic label and thinks that it is somehow more sustainable, environmentally friendlier and healthier. However, I fully support anyone who is willing to produce for this market, after all, the consumer is never wrong, and if you can make more money filling this need, more power to you.
Comment