Organic farming is carbon sequestration we can believe in

The phrase "carbon sequestration" is often used in connection with so-called "clean coal" technology that doesn't exist. Scientific debate over the best methods of carbon capture and storage tends to weigh the costs and benefits of various high-tech solutions to the problem.

But Tim LaSalle, CEO of the non-profit Rodale Institute, reminds us in a guest column for the Des Moines Register that an effective means of sequestering carbon in our soil already exists:

By using organic agricultural methods and eliminating petroleum-based fertilizers and toxic chemical pest-and-weed control, we build - rather than destroy - the biology of our soil. While improving the health of the soil we also enhance its ability to diminish the effects of flooding, as just one example. In some laboratory trials, organically farmed soils have provided 850 percent less runoff than conventional, chemically fertilized soils. This is real flood prevention, not sandbag bandages for life-threatening emergencies.

When the soil is nurtured through organic methods, it allows plants to naturally pull so much carbon dioxide from the air and store it in the soil that global warming can actually be reversed. Farms using conventional, chemical fertilizer release soil carbon into the atmosphere. Switching to organic methods turns a major global-warming contributor into the single largest remedy of the climate crisis, while eliminating toxic farm chemical drainage into our streams, rivers and aquifers.

Using such methods, we would be sequestering from 25 percent to well over 100 percent of our carbon-dioxide emissions. Microscopic life forms in the soil hold carbon in the soil for up to 100 years. This is much more efficient than inserting foreign genes. Healthy soil already does that at such remarkable levels it usually can eliminate crop disasters, which means greater food security for all nations. And the beauty is, investing in soils is not patentable, enriching just some, but instead is free to all.

Where has this science, this solution, been hiding? It has been intentionally buried under the weight of special interests - that are selling chemicals into our farming system, lobbying Congress, embedding employees in government agencies and heavily funding agricultural university research.

A few years ago, the Rodale Institute published a detailed report on how Organic farming combats global warming. Click that link for more facts and figures.

For more on how groups promoting industrial agriculture lobby Congress, see this Open Secrets report and this piece from the Green Guide on The New Food Pyramid: How Corporations Squash Regulation.

Expanding organic farming and reducing the amount of chemicals used on conventional farms would have other environmental advantages as well, most obviously an improvement in water quality both in farming states and downstream. Last week the National Academcy of Sciences released findings from the latest study proving that chemicals applied to farms are a major contributor to the "dead zone" in the Gulf of Mexico:

The study, conducted at the request of the Environmental Protection Agency, recommends setting pollution reduction targets for the watersheds, or drainage areas, that are the largest sources of the pollution that flows down the Mississippi River to the gulf.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture was urged to help fund a series of pilot projects to test how changes in farming practices and land use can reduce the runoff of nitrogen and phosphorus. The report, written by a panel of scientists, did not say how much money would be needed. Agricultural experts and congressional aides said it wasn't clear whether there was enough money in federal conservation programs to fund the necessary projects.
[...]

The government has been debating for years about how to address the oxygen-depleted dead zone, or hypoxia, in the gulf. The dead zone reached 8,000 square miles this year, the second-largest area recorded since mapping began in the 1980s.
[...]

Agricultural groups don't want mandatory controls put on farms.

However, a scientific advisory board of the EPA has recommended reducing the amount of nitrogen and phosphorus flowing to the gulf by 45 percent. More than 75 percent of those two pollutants originates in nine states, including Iowa, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.

Here's a link to more detailed findings about how agricultural states contribute to the dead zone in the Gulf of Mexico.

Organic farming is also good for rural economic development because it employs more people. I'll write more soon on the economic benefits of implementing other sustainable agriculture policies.

Tags: agricultural policy, Agriculture, carbon capture, carbon sequestration, carbon-dioxide emissions, chemicals, Climate change, conventional farming, dead zone, farming, fertilizer, Global Warming, Gulf of Mexico, hypoxia, industrial agriculture, organic farming, pesticides, sustainable agriculture, water quality (all tags)

Comments

3 Comments

Organic farming is like a miracle cure all.

It solves so many problems. And I'm not being facetious.

by Jeff Wegerson 2008-12-15 07:26AM | 0 recs
Re: Organic farming is carbon sequestration we can


Concerning the first quote - what does "850 percent less" mean? Sounds like abuse of statistics.

850 percent less than one gallon of runoff is minus 7.5 gallons. This would imply that if rain falls on a patch of organically formed land, it magically soaks up 7.5 times as much water from its surroundings as would run off it under conventional agriculture. In other words water runs uphill into organically farmed land. I think the percentage calculation went a bit wrong here.

Seriously, is there a way to incorporate this into the idea of carbon taxes? Unfortunately, while it is easy to determine the amount of fuel someone is burning, it is extremely hard to measure the amount of CO2 that a particular farm puts out or absorbs. So could it be reasonable to apply tax penalties or credits based just on an expectation that certain methods of farming are 'better' or 'worse'?

by stringph 2008-12-16 02:28AM | 0 recs
Fantastic now climate change

is just another reason why I'm happy to eat organic foods as much as possible. Better for me, better for the environment in general and now with climate change benefits.

by Quinton 2008-12-16 04:26AM | 0 recs

Diaries

Advertise Blogads


----------- myDD - skin -----------