Subject: Organic Farming Will Feed the World 
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From: "George Monbiot" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Organic Farming Will Feed the World

Astonishingly, it's more productive than high-tech agriculture

By George Monbiot. Published in the Guardian 24th August 2000



The advice could scarcely have come from a more surprising source. "If 
anyone tells you that GM is going to feed the world," Steve Smith, a 
director of the world's biggest biotechnology company, Novartis, 
insisted, "tell them that it is not. ... To feed the world takes 
political and financial will - it's not about production and 
distribution."

Mr Smith was voicing a truth which most of his colleagues in the 
biotechnology companies have gone to great lengths to deny. On a planet 
wallowing in surfeit, people starve because they have neither the land 
on which to grow food for themselves nor the money with which to buy it. 
There is no question that, as population increases, the world will have 
to grow more, but if this task is left to the rich and powerful - big 
farmers and big business - then, irrespective of how much is grown, 
people will become progressively hungrier. Only a redistribution of both 
land and wealth can save the world from mass starvation.


But in one respect Mr Smith is wrong. It is - in part - about 
production. A series of remarkable experimental results has shown that 
the growing techniques which his company and many others have sought to 
impose upon the world are, in contradiction to everything we have been 
brought up to believe, actually less productive than some of the methods 
developed by traditional farmers over the past 10,000 years.


Last week, Nature magazine reported the results of one of the biggest 
agricultural experiments ever conducted. A team of Chinese scientists 
had tested the key principle of modern rice-growing - planting a single, 
high-tech variety across hundreds of hectares - against a much older 
technique: planting several breeds in one field. They found, to the 
astonishment of the farmers who had been drilled for years in the 
benefits of "monoculture", that reverting to the old method resulted in 
spectacular increases in yield. Rice blast - a devastating fungus which 
normally requires repeated applications of poison to control - decreased 
by 94 per cent. The farmers planting a mixture of strains were able to 
stop applying their poisons altogether, while producing 18 per cent more 
rice per acre than they were growing before.


Two years ago, another paper published in Nature showed that yields of
organic maize are identical to yields of maize grown with fertilisers 
and pesticides, while soil quality in the organic fields dramatically 
improves. In trials in Hertfordshire, wheat grown with manure has 
produced consistently higher yields for the past 150 years than wheat 
grown with artificial nutrients.


Professor Jules Pretty of Essex University has shown how farmers in 
India, Kenya, Brazil, Guatemala and Honduras have doubled or tripled 
their yields by switching to organic or semi-organic techniques. A study 
in the United States reveals that small farmers growing a wide range of 
plants can produce ten times as much money per acre as big farmers 
growing single crops. Cuba, forced into organic farming by the economic 
blockade, has now adopted it as policy, having discovered that it 
improves both the productivity and the quality of the crops its farmers 
grow.


High-tech farming, by contrast, is sowing ever graver problems. This 
year, food production in Punjab and Haryana, the Indian states long 
celebrated as the great success stories of modern, intensive cultivation 
has all but collapsed. The new crops the farmers there have been 
encouraged to grow demand far more water and nutrients than the old 
ones, with the result that, in many places, both the ground water and 
the soil have been exhausted.


We have, in other words, been deceived. Traditional farming has been 
stamped out all over the world not because it is less productive than 
monoculture, but because it is, in some respects, more productive. 
Organic cultivation has been characterised as an enemy of progress for 
the simple reason that it cannot be monopolised: it can be adopted by 
any farmer anywhere on earth, without the help of multinational 
companies. Though it is more productive to grow several species or 
several varieties of crops in one field, the biotech companies must 
reduce diversity in order to make money, leaving farmers with no choice 
but to purchase their most profitable seeds. This is why they have spent 
the last ten years buying up seed breeding institutes and lobbying 
governments to do what ours has done: banning the sale of any seed which 
has not been officially - and expensively - registered and approved.


All this requires an unrelenting propaganda war against the tried and 
tested techniques of traditional farming, as the big companies and their 
biddable scientists dismiss them as unproductive, unsophisticated and 
unsafe. The truth, so effectively suppressed that it is now almost 
impossible to believe, is that organic farming is the key to feeding the 
world.


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