"The catastrophic impacts of climate change are not only going
to take place in the distant future. They are taking place now."
- Vandana Shiva, Soil not Oil: Environmental Justice in an Age
of Climate Crisis
____________________________________________________
Climate Stabilization Requires a Cultural and
Political Revolution
The climate, energy, and political catastrophe we are facing is
mind-boggling and frightening. Yet there is still time to save
ourselves, to move beyond psychological denial, despair, or
false optimism. There is still hope if we are willing to
confront the hydra-headed monsters that block our path, and move
ahead with a decisive plan of action. The inspirational message
we need to deliver is that we're not just talking about
drastically reducing fossil fuel use and greenhouse gas (GHG)
pollution, but rebuilding society, creating in effect a New
Woman and a New Man for the 21st Century. What we are witnessing
are the early stages of a mass grassroots consciousness-raising
and taking back of power from out-of-control corporations,
banks, corporate-controlled media, and politicians. This
cultural and political revolution will empower us to to carry
out a deep and profound retrofitting of industry, government,
education, health care, housing, neighborhoods, transportation,
food and farming systems, as well as our diets and lifestyles.
The scale of human and physical resources needed to turn our
current suicide economy into a green economy is daunting, but
absolutely necessary and achievable. The only viable roadmap for
survival-an 80-90% reduction in fossil fuel use and greenhouse
gas (GHG) emissions by 2050-means we must force a drastic
reduction in military spending (current wars and military
spending are costing us almost one trillion dollars a year). We
must tax the rich and the greenhouse gas polluters, and bring
our out-of-control politicians, banks, Federal Reserve System,
and corporations to heel.
The good news, as Van Jones and others have pointed out, is that
this 21st Century green economy will not only stabilize the
climate, but enable us to retrain and reemploy the U.S.
workforce, including low-income youth and 16-25 million
unemployed workers, as building retrofitters, solar and wind
installers, recyclers, organic gardeners, farmers,
nutritionists, holistic health care providers, and other green
economy workers.
Beyond Copenhagen: Civilization at the
Crossroads
The negotiators and heads of state at the December 2009
Copenhagen Climate negotiations abandoned the summit with
literally no agreement on meaningful greenhouse gas (carbon
dioxide, nitrous oxide, methane) reduction, and little or no
acknowledgement of the major role that industrial (non-organic)
food and farming practices play in global warming. Unfortunately
the statements and behavior of Copenhagen delegates, and the
enormous divisions between the Global South and the
industrialized nations, make it clear that galvanizing a legally
binding international agreement to drastically reduce greenhouse
gas pollution will be a protracted and difficult struggle.
China and the United States are equally and jointly responsible
for more than 40% of the current global climate destabilizing
GHGs. China's emissions arise from 20% of the world's
population. U.S. emissions come from 5%. Although China, India,
Mexico, Brazil and other developing nations are responsible for
a growing discharge of GHGs, most of the greenhouse gasses in
the atmosphere and oceans today are directly attributable to the
United States and Europe's industrial and transportation
emissions since the early 1900s.
From an ethical, legal, and survival perspective, North America,
E.U. and Japan must lead the way. To avoid a disastrous rise in
global temperature (a literal climate holocaust), the wealthy,
highly industrialized nations must acknowledge the seriousness
of the crisis, cut their emissions, and stop playing blame and
denial games with China, India, Brazil, Mexico, South Africa and
other developing nations. Major cuts by the developed nations
need to start now, and they need to be deep, not 7% as President
Obama proposed in Copenhagen, nor the 20% that the E.U. offered.
The hour is late. Leading climate scientists such as James
Hansen are literally shouting at the top of their lungs that the
world needs to reduce emissions by 20-40% as soon as possible,
and 80-90% by the year 2050, if we are to avoid climate chaos,
crop failures, endless wars, melting of the polar icecaps, and a
disastrous rise in ocean levels. Either we radically reduce CO2
and carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e, which includes all GHGs,
not just CO2) pollutants (currently at 390 parts per million and
rising 2 ppm per year) to 350 ppm, including agriculture-derived
methane and nitrous oxide pollution, or else survival for the
present and future generations is in jeopardy. As scientists
warned at Copenhagen, business as usual and a corresponding
7-8.6 degree Fahrenheit rise in global temperatures means that
the carrying capacity of the Earth in 2100 will be reduced to
one billion people. Under this hellish scenario, billions will
die of thirst, cold, heat, disease, war, and starvation.
If the U.S. significantly reduces greenhouse gas emissions,
other countries will follow. One hopeful sign is the recent EPA
announcement that it intends to regulate greenhouse gases as
pollutants under the Clean Air Act. Unfortunately we are going
to have to put tremendous pressure on elected public officials
to force the EPA to crack down on GHG polluters (including
industrial farms and food processors). Public pressure is
especially critical since "just say no" Congressmen-both
Democrats and Republicans-along with agribusiness, real estate
developers, the construction industry, and the fossil fuel lobby
appear determined to maintain "business as usual."
During the Bush years, scientific warnings and public
demonstrations against global warming were ignored or
trivialized, even though many of our protests were large and
well organized. Now, in theory, we finally have a Congressional
majority and a President who claim to be willing to listen and
take action to stop global warming. But in order to get their
attention, and move from small change to major change, we are
going to have to turn up the volume. We have to stop thinking
that things are going to get better because Obama is
right-minded. Things are going to get better if and when we
force Obama and our out-of-control politicians and corporations
to bend to the people's will.
Beyond Copenhagen: Making Polluters Pay
Instead of the weak "cap and trade" bill supported by Wall
Street speculators, and passed by the House, we need a real tax
on GHG pollution. Yes, we can and must directly rebate working
class and poor people for increased energy costs, but hundreds
of billions of dollars in GHG and corporate taxes annually must
be earmarked over the next decade for green infrastructure
development, including a new electric grid, a mass transition to
organic agriculture, mass transit upgrades, deep retrofitting of
the nation's five million commercial and 83 million residential
buildings, and a crash program of alternative energy research
and development.
We must continue to expose the worst greenhouse gas polluters,
such as utilities companies, petrochemical corporations, car
manufacturers, coal and mining companies, the construction
industry, and corporate agribusiness, and demand that they begin
to retool their industries immediately. We must move beyond
polite protest and scattered dissent and dramatically take our
message to the streets and the corporate suites, Congress, state
legislatures, and our local governments.
The Deadly Greenhouse Footprint of American
Consumers
We all know in general that cars, trucks, coal and power plants,
household heating and cooling, and manufacturing industries spew
a majority of the greenhouse gasses into the atmosphere and the
oceans. But did you know that U.S. household use of fossil fuels
(housing, transportation, and food) accounts for 67% of total
energy consumption and 67% of GHG's emitted? 1
Heating, lighting, and cooling our poorly insulated and designed
113 million homes and apartments and running our electrical and
gas appliances consumes 26.6% of total U.S. fossil fuels.
Cruising in our gas guzzling (averaging 22 miles per gallon) and
underutilized cars (average 1.4 passengers per journey) burns up
another 23.4% of energy.
Eating highly processed and packaged foods and animal products,
produced on chemical and energy-intensive factory-style farms,
transported over long distances, and throwing our waste foods
into the garbage (rather than composting them) eats up another
17.3% of the nation's energy.
The average U.S. citizen generates 19.6 tons of climate
destabilizing greenhouse gases every year, more than twice as
much as the European Union and Japan (9.3 tons per capita), and
7.3 times as much as the developing world (2.7 tons per capita).
The Tab for Saving the U.S. from Climate
Chaos: $700 Billion a Year
The estimated costs over the next 40-50 years to replace coal
and natural gas with solar and wind in electricity generation,
at current levels of use, is $15 trillion (which is about the
equivalent of U.S. GNP for one year) . 2
We must reduce fossil fuel use by 80-90% in the nation's five
million commercial and 83 million residential buildings (which
currently use up 40% or 40 quadrillion BTUs of our total
energy), including reducing building size, changing lighting and
windows, making wall, ceilings and floors as thick and as
airtight as possible (R-50 or R-60), and placing furnaces and
ductwork inside the retrofitted space. The estimated costs for
this in future decades will amount to another $10-15 trillion
This figure is based upon deep retrofitting costs of $50,000 per
residential unit, and $600,000-$2,000,000 per commercial
building, with two million new more compact units per year
replacing old housing and business stock and meeting new 90%
fossil fuel reduction standards.
Converting from our current energy and chemical/GMO-intensive
food and farming system (which currently accounts for 35% of our
greenhouse gases and $800 billion in diet-related health care
costs annually) to one which is organic, relocalized,
energy-efficient, and carbon sequestering, will cost at least
another $100 billion per year, or $5 trillion over 50 years.
Rebuilding our mass transit systems and reorganizing personal
transportation (5-15 people in high-mileage "smart jitneys" and
electric cars and vans instead of 1.4 passengers in gas
guzzlers, along with a massive increase in bicycle use) will
cost us at least another $100 billion a year, or $5 trillion
over 50 years.
In other words we need to start redirecting $700 billion a year
in federal expenditures away from war and corporate welfare,
offer training and jobs in a giant green jobs program (similar
to the Works Project Administration program of the New Deal era
in the 1930s), and build a new green, full-employment economy.
Where are we going to get this money? Not by raising taxes on
working people and the poor, but by taxing the rich and the
greenhouse gas polluting corporations, and guaranteeing loans
from a new citizen-controlled Federal Reserve and banking
system.
A major part of this transition to an organic and low-carbon
economy will require innovative public and private financing for
home, transportation, food and farming retrofitting along the
lines of the recent PACE (Property Assessed Clean Energy)
program in California. 3 Under this "Slow Money" regime,
homeowners, renters, businesses, and farmers can immediately
start to reduce their energy bills and carbon footprints and get
their homes, businesses, and farms retrofitted for no money
down, with low-interest costs being added to their mortgages and
tax bills over an extended 30-40 year period.
Can we afford $700 billion per year? Obviously we can, although
shortsighted, unsustainable corporate profits will no doubt
suffer. Keep in mind that the Pentagon budget, not including the
wars for oil and strategic resources in Afghanistan and Iraq,
will cost us over $700 billion dollars this year. And don't
forget that Obama and his advisors recently handed over
approximately $12 trillion in subsidies and grants to the Wall
Street criminals and pathological kleptomaniacs who rule our
out-of-control financial system. Clearly, what we are proposing
is chump-change compared to our recent corporate giveaways.
Honest businesses, homeowners, consumers, farmers and industries
that reduce their carbon footprint and help develop the green
economy can and should receive substantial tax credits.
Speculators, mercenaries, toxic polluters, and Masters of War
can go to financial hell, where they belong.
The Hidden Greenhouse Gas Damage of Food Inc.
Although transportation, industry, and energy producers are
significant polluters, few people understand that the worst U.S.
greenhouse gas emitter is "Food Incorporated," industrial food
and farming. Industrial farming accounts for at least 35% of
U.S. greenhouse gas emissions (EPA's ridiculously low estimates
range from 7% to 12%, while some climate scientists feel the
figure could be as high as 50% or more). Industrial agriculture,
biofuels, and cattle grazing-including whacking down the last
remaining tropical rainforests in Latin America and Asia for
animal feed and biofuels-are also the main driving forces in
global deforestation and wetlands destruction, which generate an
additional 20% of all climate destabilizing GHGs. In other words
the direct and indirect impacts of industrial agriculture and
the food industry are the major cause of global warming.
Currently conventional (energy and chemical-intensive
non-organic) farms emit at least 25% of the carbon dioxide
(mostly from tractors, trucks, combines, transportation,
cooling, freezing, and heating), 40% of the methane (mostly from
animal gas, and manure ponds), and 96% of nitrous oxide (mostly
from synthetic fertilizer manufacture and use, the millions of
tons of animal manure from cattle herds, pig and poultry flocks,
and millions of tons of sewage sludge spread on farms). Per ton,
methane is 21 times more damaging, and nitrous oxide 310 times
more damaging as a greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide , when
measured over a one hundred year period. Damage is even worse if
you look at the impact on global warming over the next crucial
20-year period. Many climate scientists now admit that they have
previously drastically underestimated the dangers of the non-CO2
GHGs, including methane and nitrous oxide, which are responsible
for at least 20% of global warming. 4
A major portion of the CO2e (all GHGs not just CO2) emitted by
industrial farming comes from long distance transportation,
heating, freezing, and processing. So, the more you cook from
scratch, buy locally, and eat raw vegetables and fruits, the
less CO2e you produce. The bottom line is that we as a society
are what we eat. In the oncoming era of climate chaos and peak
oil, we must make the transition to energy efficient, climate
adaptable, local and regional based organic farms, urban
gardens, and primarily vegetarian diets, or we will likely not
survive.
Almost all U.S. food and farm-derived methane comes from factory
farms, huge herds of confined cows, hogs, poultry operations, as
well as rotting food waste thrown into land-fills instead of
being separated out of the solid waste stream and properly
composted. To drastically reduce methane releases we need an
immediate ban on factory farms, dairies, and feedlots. We also
need mandatory separation and recycling of food wastes and green
garbage at the municipal level, so that that we can produce
large quantities of high quality organic compost to replace the
billions of pounds of chemical fertilizer and sewage sludge
which are releasing GHGs, destroying soil fertility, polluting
our waters, and undermining public health.
Nearly all nitrous oxide pollution comes from dumping billions
of pounds of synthetic nitrogen fertilizer and sewage sludge on
farmland (chemical fertilizers and sludge are banned on organic
farms and ranches), mainly to grow animal feed. Since about 80%
of U.S. agriculture is devoted to producing meat, dairy, and
animal feed, reducing agriculture GHGs means eliminating the
overproduction and over-consumption of meat and animal products.
Organic Farming and Ranching Can Drastically
Reduce GHG Emissions
The currently catastrophic, but largely unrecognized, GHG damage
from chemical farms and industrial food production and
distribution must be reversed. This will involve wholesale
changes in farming practices, government subsidies, food
processing and handling. It will require the conversion of a
million chemical farms and ranches to organic production. It
will require the establishment of millions of urban backyard and
community gardens.
If consumer pressure and grassroots mobilization geared toward
changing public policies cannot force U.S. factory farmers to
change the way they farm, process, and ship their products it
will be almost impossible to deal with catastrophic U.S.
greenhouse gas emissions and climate change. 5 On a very hopeful
note, however, i f farmers do change, and make the transition to
organic farming, farm and ranch land can become a significant
sink or sequester pool for greenhouse gasses, literally sucking
excess greenhouse gases out of the atmosphere and the ozone
layer and sequestering them safely in the soil, where they
belong.
Our planet has five pools or repositories where greenhouse gases
are absorbed and stored: the oceans, the atmosphere, the soils,
the forests, and hydrocarbon deposits. 6 Because U.S farm and
forest soils are so degraded from chemical-intensive, mono-crop
farming practices and over-logging they are only able to absorb
and store half (or less) of the carbon gases than they would be
capable of if they were organically managed. As a result of this
reckless mismanagement, the atmosphere and the oceans are
absorbing the bulk of the greenhouse gases that normally would
be absorbed by farmland and forests. This has led to a
catastrophic excess of GHGs in both the oceans and the
atmosphere. This excess has caused changes in climate and
extreme fluctuations in weather; including droughts and
torrential flooding. It also causes oceanic acidification,
oceanic dead zones, and dramatic declines in fish and crustacean
populations.
Unfortunately, when they evaluate agricultural pollutants,
pro-agribusiness government bureaucrats in the EPA and USDA do
not include many of the greenhouse gas emissions. They do not
take into account the transportation, cooling, freezing, and
heating of farm products as agricultural GHG emissions, even
though our food travels an average of 1500 miles to our tables
and is routinely frozen and cooled to ensure its deliverability.
They don't count the CO2 and "black carbon" particle emissions
from trucks, tractors, combines and other equipment used on
farms. They don't count the emissions from fertilizer
manufacture or use, wasteful packing, sewage sludge spread on
farm and range land, or the methane emitted from factory farms
and the billions of tons of rotting, non-composted food in our
landfills and garbage dumps. Instead, they lump and thereby
conceal all these farm and food related GHG emissions under the
categories of industrial manufacture, transportation, or
electrical use. As a result, the public spotlight never shines
on mounting agricultural, food, garbage, and sludge pollution.
Because government officials deliberately fail to evaluate the
real farm and food-derived greenhouse gas emissions, they are
free to act as if the emissions coming from agriculture are not
significant compared to the U.S. total, even though they
represent more than one-third of the total pollutants.
Consequently, most lawmakers and the public don't realize how
urgent it is to regulate and drastically curtail factory farm
and Food Inc.'s emissions.
Chemical Fertilizer and Sewage Sludge: Silent
Killers
The most damaging greenhouse gas poisons used by farmers and
ranchers are synthetic nitrogen fertilizer and
municipal/industrial sewage sludge. Obviously pesticide
manufacture and use are also serious problems and generate their
own large share of greenhouse gases during manufacture and use
(more than 25 billion pounds per year). But, about six times
more chemical fertilizer is used than toxic pesticides on U.S.
farms, and an additional huge volume of sewage sludge is spread
on farm and range land as well. 7
German chemical corporations developed the industrial processes
for the two most widely used forms of synthetic nitrogen in the
early 1900s. But, until World War II, U.S. use of synthetic
nitrogen as a fertilizer was limited to about 5% of the total
nitrogen applied. Up until that time most nitrogen inputs came
from animal manures, composts and fertilizer (cover) crops, just
as it does on organic farms today. 8
During the Second World War, all of the European powers and the
U.S. greatly expanded their facilities for producing nitrogen
for bombs, ammunition, and fertilizer for the war effort. Since
then, the use of nitrogen fertilizer and bomb making capacity
has soared. By the 1990s, more than 90% of nitrogen fertilizer
used in the U.S. was synthetic. 9
According to the United States Department of Agriculture, the
average U.S. nitrogen fertilizer use per year from 1998 to 2007
was 24 billion 661 million pounds. To produce that nitrogen the
manufacturers released at least 6.7 pounds of greenhouse gas for
every pound produced. That's 165 billion, 228 million pounds of
GHGs spewed into the atmosphere every year, just for the
manufacture of synthetic nitrogen fertilizer. 10 And, most of
those emissions are nitrous oxide, the most damaging emissions
of U.S. agriculture.
Besides its greenhouse gas impacts, nitrogen fertilizer has
other negative environmental consequences. Two-thirds of the
U.S. drinking water supply is contaminated at high levels with
carcinogenic nitrates or nitrites, almost all from excessive use
of synthetic nitrogen fertilizer. Some public wells have
nitrogen at such a high level that it is dangerous and even
deadly for children to drink the tap water. Nitrogen fertilizer
is also the greatest contributor to the infamous "dead zones" in
the Gulf of Mexico, the Chesapeake Bay, the coasts of California
and Oregon, and 400 other spots around the world. Since very
little synthetic nitrogen fertilizer was used before 1950, all
of the damage we see today occurred in the last 60 years.
If we did an environmental impact statement on synthetic
nitrogen fertilizer today, we would never give it a permit for
agricultural use. Until it is banned for the production of food
and fiber, we must impose a high carbon tax on its manufacture
and use. Unfortunately, at this point, agriculture is excluded
from even the weak cap and trade plan passed by the House. So,
although factory farming is responsible for more greenhouse
gases than any other U.S. industry, it will not be regulated
under the proposed legislation designed to limit greenhouse
gases, unless we demand it. We must demand that synthetic
nitrogen fertilizer be highly taxed and regulated in the short
term, and phased out, as soon as possible. 11
We must also demand an end to the giveaway or sales of hazardous
sewage sludge in agriculture, gardening or forestry . Instead of
sewage sludge-contaminated and chemical-intensive farms, organic
agriculture produces safer, nutritionally superior, comparable
crop yields during normal weather, as well as much greater
yields under drought and heavy rain conditions, without the use
of synthetic pesticides, sewage sludge, or chemical fertilizer.
The Good News on Organics and Climate Change
The heretofore unpublicized "good news" on climate change,
according to the Rodale Institute 12 and other soil scientists,
is that transitioning from chemical, water, and energy-intensive
industrial agriculture practices to organic farming and ranching
on the world's 3.5 billion acres of farmland and 8.2 billion
acres of pasture or rangeland can sequester up to 7,000 pounds
per acre of climate-destabilizing CO2 every year, while
nurturing healthy soils, plants, grasses, and trees that are
resistant to drought, heavy rain, pests, and disease. And as we
have noted, organic farms and ranches provide us with food that
is much more nutritious than industrial farms and ranches-food
filled with vitamins, anti-oxidants, and essential trace
minerals, free from Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs),
pesticides, antibiotics, and sewage sludge.
In 2006, U.S. carbon dioxide pollution from fossil fuels
(approximately 25% of the world's total) was estimated at nearly
6.5 billion tons. If a 7,000 lb/CO2/ac/year sequestration rate
were achieved on all 434 million acres of cropland in the United
States, nearly 1.6 billion tons of carbon dioxide would be
sequestered per year, mitigating close to one quarter of the
country's total fossil fuel emissions. If pastures and
rangelands were similarly converted to organic practices, we
would be well on our way to reversing global warming.
Toxic Sludge from Municipal Sewage Treatment
Plants
Besides synthetic nitrogen fertilizers, unhealthy foods,
pesticides, GMOs, and climate and environmentally destructive
factory farm meat, a serious problem in the U.S. is the
increasing use of hazardous sludge from sewage treatment plants
to fertilize farm and pasture land. Sixty percent of all the
sludge produced in the U.S. is currently applied to farmland
that grows food for cattle and people. Estimates range from
eight billion to more than 100 billion pounds. 13
A critical mass of scientific studies indicate that municipal
sewage sludge routinely contains hundreds of dangerous
pathogens, toxic heavy metals, flame retardants, endocrine
disruptors, carcinogens, pharmaceutical drugs and other
hazardous chemicals coming from residential drains, storm water
runoff, hospitals, and industrial plants. Poisonous sludge is
currently being spread on at least 70 million acres on 140,000
(non-organic) farms and ranches across the U.S. So-called EPA
"regulation" of sludge is among the worst in the world. Unless
we stop this dangerous practice, the sludge industry will
destroy millions of acres of farmland as well as urban land we
will need for future urban gardens. Sludge is also an
increasingly worrisome greenhouse gas emitter.
The Organic Movement Must "Get Political" and
Become a Major Player
We must advocate and agitate, as well as "walk our talk" in our
daily lives. We must organize a U.S. and global mass movement
for the conversion of the world's 3.5 billion acres of farmland
and 8.2 billion acres of rangeland and pasture to organic
production as soon as possible. Organic regulations prohibit the
use of synthetic nitrogen, pesticides, sludge, antibiotics,
artificial hormones, GMOs, and other environmentally
destructive, health-threatening, greenhouse gas emitting
practices. Organic must become the norm, not just the
alternative. To facilitate a mass transition to organic we must
force the U.S. Congress, as well as local and state governments,
to fund a great "organic transition," including the creation of
thousands of cadres of organically trained extension agents, and
a million new urban, community, and school gardens. Thousands of
U.S. farmers have already made the transition to organic. Now a
million more need to do the same.
More and more farmers around the world are learning that they
can significantly reduce greenhouse gas pollution and produce
substantial, high quality yields by switching to organic farming
practices. While we develop our alternative marketplace and
pressure legislators and the regulators to act, we must urge
conscientious conventional farmers to use existing federal
Conservation Reserve, Conservation Security, EQUIP
(Environmental Quality Incentives Program), and special practice
programs to help them begin the switch to organic as soon as
possible.
Restoring Climate Stability: Soil and More
U.S. farmers, as well as farmers all over the world, have known
for at least 200 years that they should replace lost soil
fertility. Over the last two centuries, numerous strategies were
devised in the U.S. to replace soil nitrogen and soil organic
matter, without the use of chemicals. Many of these strategies
are widely used today by organic and biodynamic farmers.
As early as 1813, John Taylor lamented the loss of vegetable
(organic) matter in the soil and felt that we were destroying
our precious soil fertility by over cropping and sloppy farming
practices. 14 Since the 1840s, fertilizer manufacturers and
alchemists tried to convince farmers to replace fertility with
store bought chemicals. But, farmers were wary of these products
and the claims made by their salesmen.
Other scientists argued over the years that soil with
high-organic matter content was far more productive and fertile
even in times of drought and excess moisture. 15 As a result,
U.S. farmers traditionally replaced their organic matter with
fertilizer crops, manure, and compost, and most did not buy
store bought fertilizer until the 1950s.
In 2007 and 2009, results similar to these conclusions were
reported from studies of the Morrow agricultural experiment
plots at the University of Illinois, in Champaign-Urbana (the
oldest continuously planted U.S. experimental farm plot). There,
researchers found that continuous corn on a synthetic nitrogen
fertilized plot since 1955 suffered significant carbon losses
and soil nitrogen losses compared to pre-1955 when the plots
were fertilized organically with manure, fertilizer crops, and
compost. 16
A significant factor in the decline of these soils was the loss
of organic matter, since soil organic matter both feeds soil
microorganisms and the miccorhizal fungi-both vital components
of a healthy soil. Since 1950, the soils of the major farming
areas of the U.S. have been bombarded yearly with vast
quantities of soil-killing pesticides and synthetic fertilizers,
just as the Morrow plots were. The Morrow plot conclusions
should be a wake-up call to farmers and synthetic fertilizer
consultants. Those conclusions are that currently recommended
fertilizer applications are from 40 to 190% excessive and that
long-term fertility suffers when farmers depend on synthetic
fertilizers and don't replace lost organic matter utilizing
organic soil management.
On several chemically abused pieces of ground where we farmed,
and with cotton, vegetable, and corn farmers we have advised, we
were able to dramatically increase the soil organic matter in
three or four years from 1.5% to 3 or 4%, effectively doubling
the amount of GHG sequestration while eliminating nitrate
fertilizer runoff and emissions. Using a small amount of compost
and growing fertilizer crops in the fall and winter months and
cash-fertility crops in the spring and summer accomplished these
increases. Each percentage point increase in organic matter
represents a major increase in soil nitrogen, i.e., nitrogen
produced by microorganisms decomposing organic matter. Each
percentage increase in organic matter also enables the soil to
absorb and store more carbon.
Beyond Factory Farm Beef, Pork, and Poultry
Along with changing the way we farm, we must also alter what we
farm, and what we eat. Our excessive dependence on meat is not
sustainable over the long term since, as we have noted, 80% of
our agriculture is devoted to producing animals, which is the
least energy efficient food. To raise meat on factory farms
takes too many input calories (primarily fossil fuel), too much
acreage, too much nitrogen fertilizer, as well as hazardous
pesticides, antibiotics, and hormones, not to mention millions
of acres of genetically modified (GM) crops.
A few examples illustrate this point clearly. It takes 10 to 12
pounds of grain (corn, wheat, soy, cottonseed) to produce one
pound of marketable feedlot beef (that is 5000 to 6000 pounds of
grain to produce 500 pounds of meat). It takes one gallon of oil
to grow and ship the feed for one pound of beef. It requires 78
calories of fossil fuel (mostly to grow the grain) to produce
one calorie of protein from feedlot-produced beef. 2500 gallons
of water are needed to produce a single pound of confinement
beef.
We all need to eat less (or better yet none) of the non-organic
fatty meats that are grown in abusive feedlots, hog hotels, and
poultry prisons. Just reducing U.S. meat intake by a third would
reduce agricultural greenhouse gas emissions by one-third. And,
if you replace the factory farm meat in your diet with range fed
organic meat you will reduce your personal carbon footprint,
strike a blow for humane treatment of farm animals, and improve
your health. Meat eaters don't necessarily have to stop eating
meat, they just need to understand which meat is safe and
humanely raised (organic and grass-fed), and sustainable.
Ultimately, if we change our eating habits, and curtail our
Madison Avenue and mass media-induced need to buy and consume so
many clothes and consumer products, we can significantly reduce
our carbon footprint. Whether or not government bureaucrats and
corporations change their behavior in the short term will be
determined by the strength of U.S. and global grassroots
movements . But we will never be able to build, motivate, and
lead these movements unless we first start walking our talk and
create viable models of organic conversion and green economics
in our individual lives and in our local communities.
On the other hand, changing our habits is not enough-we must
demand that the Obama administration act and impose a carbon
tax, including a tax on chemical agriculture. We need to
demand much higher emission reduction commitments, along with an
end to the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, nationalization of the
big banks and financial institutions, and a restoration of
democracy, starting with publicly funded elections. The
remaining TARP bank rescue money should go to kick-start green
energy, transportation, and sustainable agriculture projects,
and to train and hire the jobless to retrofit and build the new
green economy. These are strategic Main Street issues;
communities want new green infrastructure, healthy food, new
industries, and new quality jobs.
A New Works Project Administration
A modern day Works Project Administration could train and employ
a massive green corps to create the green infrastructure and
post-carbon economy. When FDR created the Works Project
Administration in the 1930s there were about 60,000,000 workers
in the labor market. Twenty-five percent, or 15,000,000 people
were unemployed. Today, there are 154,400,000 workers in the
labor market. The Labor Department estimates that 10.3% of the
population is unemployed. Most analysts argue that the
percentage is closer to 16.5%. Whoever is right, and whether it
is 15.9 million or 24.7 million, more people are out of work now
than during the Great Depression. And they desperately need jobs
and training, just like people did during the Depression.
Environmentalist Bill McKibben is right, we need to mobilize a
grassroots army to demand reductions in emissions and armies of
workers to convert our infrastructure to a green economy. That
means you must text, twitter, e-mail, and use FaceBook, Google,
YouTube and other resources to get educated about climate
change. Once you understand the gravity of the situation you
will be able to change your habits, inform your friends, and
participate in climate change demonstrations. Get organized at
the local level and then coordinate your local efforts with
nationwide networks such as the Organic Consumers Association
and www.350.org.
Your children and grandchildren are depending on you to make
their world livable. The hour is late.
Note: Contact these organizations or individuals for information
and to meet others in your community who are participating in
efforts to reduce our greenhouse gas emissions:
Organic Consumers Association:
www.organicconsumers.org
Center for Food Safety/Navdanya:
www.coolfoodscountdown.org
www.350.org
References:
1. Plan C: Community Survival Strategies for Peak Oil and
Climate Change . Pat Murphy. New Society Publishers, pp.
120-127.
2.Ibid,, p. 85
3. "How innovative financing is changing energy in America" by
Cisco Devries. Grist, January 27, 2010.
http://www.grist.org/article/2010-01-26-how-innovative-fi...
4. "Los otros contaminantes que cambian el clima" by Jessica
Seddon Wallack and Veerabhadran Ramanathan. Foreign Affairs
Latinoamerica. Vol. 9 Number 4, 2009. pp. 29-40
5. Nutrient Overload: Unbalancing the Global Nitrogen Cycle .
Staff of World Resources Program. 1998-1999
6. Agriculture and Climate Change: Impacts and Opportunities
at the Farm Level . A Policy Position Paper of the National
Sustainable Agriculture Coalition. 2008
7. Three times more phosphorous and potash fertilizer are used
than pesticides, so farmers use about 8 times as many pounds of
commercial fertilizer as toxic pesticides.
8. Allen, Will, 2008. The War on Bugs, Chelsea Green, pp. 93-96,
144
9. Ibid., pp. 146-147
10.United States Department of Agriculture Fertilizer Use
Statistics, 1998-2007
11. Until we stop being a military country, we will continue to
make synthetic nitrogen for bombs.
12. "The Organic Revolution, How We Can Stop Global Warming" by
Ronnie Cummins, and Alexis Baden-Mayer from the Organic
Consumers Association. October 19, 2009
http://www.organicconsumers.org/articles/article_19404.cfm
13. The U.S. EPA estimates that 16 billion pounds of dry sludge
are produced each year and that one-half of that is applied to
farmland. Synagro (a division of the Carlyle Group), which is
the largest distributor of sludge, contends that about 135
billion pounds of sludge are applied to farmland.
14. Taylor, John Arator, 1813, Reprint 1977, The Liberty Fund,
Indianapolis
15. Wells, David, 1852. Comparison of the Organic Matter Content
of Soils from Massachusetts and Ohio. Lawrence Scientific
School, Harvard University.
16. R.L. Mulvaney, S.A Kahn and T.R. Ellsworth, Synthetic
Nitrogen Fertilizers Deplete Soil Nitrogen: A Global Dilemma for
Sustainable Cereal Production. Published in 2009 by The Journal
of Environmental Quality. S.A Khan, R.L. Mulvaney, T.R.
Ellsworth, and C. Boast. The Myth of Nitrogen Fertilization for
Soil Carbon Sequestration . Published in the November/December
2007 issue of The Journal of Environmental Quality. Cawood,
Matt, 2009 Why Synthetic Nitrogen is Bad for Soil Carbon
Published in Stock and Land, Oct. 4.
Will Allen is an organic farmer, community organizer, activist,
and writer who farms in Vermont. He is a Policy Advisor for the
Organic Consumers Association. His book The War on Bugs was
published by Chelsea Green in 2008. His website is
www.thewaronbugsbook.com The farm website is
www.cedarcirclefarm.org
Ronnie Cummins is an organizer, writer, and activist. He is the
International Director of the Organic Consumers Association and
co-author of the book, Genetically Engineered Food: A
Self-Defense Guide for Consumers . His organization's website is
www.OrganicConsumers.org
Kate Duesterberg edited this article. She is an organic farmer
who co-manages Cedar Circle Farm, with Will Allen, in Vermont.
She previously worked as an organizer for Rural Vermont,
coordinated the Center for Sustainable Agriculture at the
University of Vermont, and was the managing director of the
Sustainable Cotton Project.