5 votes

We can’t talk about regenerative ag without talking about pesticides

2 comments

  1. [2]
    monarda
    Link
    From the article: On pesticide research and it's killing of microorganisms: On the Growing Climate Solutions Act (GCSA): Soil is the big new thing and it seems to me that there's a cash grab...

    From the article:

    On pesticide research and it's killing of microorganisms:

    The findings of this new study should alarm us not only because they further underscore the starring role pesticides play in the decline of insect populations, but also because the life of soil is at the heart of its ability to capture and store carbon. What do we mean by the “life of soil”? Plants breathe in carbon from the air, then store it in their bodies and exude it through their roots. Hidden from our view, a teeming ecosystem of microorganisms transfers carbon from roots to soil. Invertebrates such as earthworms and springtails feed on fallen plants, breaking them down and excreting carbon-rich casts and feces, mixing organic matter into the soil as they go.

    The aliveness of soil also bolsters farmers’ resilience in the face of climate-change-driven weather extremes like droughts and floods. Invertebrates are ecosystem engineers: With their tunnels and burrows, they craft soil structures, enabling the flow of nutrients, air, and water below ground. This allows the land to readily absorb water during intense rains and retain it during times of drought, much like a massive sponge.

    On the Growing Climate Solutions Act (GCSA):

    That means farmers would be paid to sequester carbon—and then those “carbon credits” would be sold to polluters, allowing them to keep polluting. There’s no doubt that farmers should be supported in shifting to regenerative methods. But the evidence shows that using carbon markets to do so is an oversimplified and dangerous approach that will “let big polluters off the hook and fail the needs of family farmers,” says the National Family Farm Coalition. Carbon markets have repeatedly failed in their primary goal of reducing greenhouse gas emissions. They have been plagued by fraud, and in many cases they have worsened pollution in low-income communities and communities of color, even resulting in human-rights abuses across the globe. Moreover, measuring soil carbon in a uniform way to ensure integrity in soil carbon markets will likely remain an elusive goal because soil carbon fluctuates based on the seasons, and samples taken even from the same field can lead to very different results.

    In light of this new study’s findings, another fundamental flaw of carbon markets is particularly concerning: They can be gamed by powerful players. Hence, the support from pesticide giants. Bayer, for instance, is pushing the passage of GCSA because the company stands to win big. If the bill passes, the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) would facilitate farmers’ participation in private schemes like the new Bayer Carbon Initiative. Farmers would enroll in Bayer’s digital agriculture platform, Climate FieldView, and implement certain practices—dictated by Bayer—to receive compensation. Bayer would then sell credits for farm-sequestered carbon to polluters. But programs like Bayer’s are designed to accommodate the largest industrial-style farms and depend on use of the company’s patented seeds and toxic pesticides like glyphosate, a weed killer with known impacts on soil organisms like earthworms. Even more perverse, Bayer may pay farmers in the form of credits to be redeemed in the Bayer PLUS Rewards Platform—credits that are most efficiently spent on more Bayer products.

    Soil is the big new thing and it seems to me that there's a cash grab happening without proper oversight. The GCSA is being endorsed by entities that I respect as well as by entities that I loathe. I'm having a bit of trouble understanding how the whole thing is going to play out and as of now have not been able to find a good overview with pros and cons. However, I read regularly about soil, and I remain unconvinced that carbon capture schemes related to soil can capture anything when speaking of cropped soils.

    3 votes
    1. vord
      Link Parent
      Living soil is very much one of those 'If we don't cultivate it, it becomes a hell of a lot harder to maintain arable land'. Any benefits besides 'avoiding utter destruction of the entire food...

      Living soil is very much one of those 'If we don't cultivate it, it becomes a hell of a lot harder to maintain arable land'.

      Any benefits besides 'avoiding utter destruction of the entire food chain' is merely a bonus.

      2 votes