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THE ECOMODERNIST ARGUMENT FOR MODERN
AGRICULTURE
By Mark Lynas
12/7/2017
Imagine that we decided to abolish farming across the world. The cities emptied,
the combines sat idle, and all 7.5 billion of us scattered out into the countryside in
search of nuts, berries, and game to make our livings as modern-day huntergatherers. How would that go?
The answer is not well. Ecologically speaking, there could be no quicker and more
effective way to eliminate most of life on Earth. It takes roughly 6 square miles to
support one hunting-gathering human. Modern intensive farming, by contrast,
can support up to 4,000 people on the same land area. That means we would
need another 12 planets to support today’s human population in an entirely
hunter-gatherer system.
This is, of course, only a thought experiment. Without technology and ingenuity
to extract more food from smaller areas, the population would never have
reached today’s levels.
This doesn’t mean all is rosy. Hundreds of millions of people, primarily in subSaharan Africa and South Asia, remain in low-input, low-yield subsistence
agriculture. In North America, Europe, and other developed regions, modern
agriculture is hugely efficient in land and labor terms.
Modern farming has also become politically controversial. The organic
movement has challenged the whole model of industrialized farming, seeking to
move to a less intensive ideal that proponents feel is closer to nature. Debates
rage about pesticides, hormones, animal welfare, and so on. Trade-offs are rarely
acknowledged. For example, organic’s lower yields inevitably mean that more
land must be tilled up to feed the same number of people, so the net
environmental effect may be negative.
Ecomodernism, a more progressive variant of environmental
thinking, seeks to take a pragmatic approach to these challenges,
welcoming technology where this can make humans less dependent
on nature. As a group of environmental activists and thinkers (of which I was
one) wrote in the Ecomodernist Manifesto in 2015:
“Ecosystems around the world are threatened today because people over-rely on
them: People who depend on firewood and charcoal for fuel cut down and
degrade forests; people who eat bush meat for food hunt mammal species to local
extinction ... modern technologies, by using natural ecosystem flows and services
more efficiently, offer a real chance of reducing the totality of human impacts on
the biosphere.”
The math is simple. Supporting a growing population without increasing
farmland requires increasing crop yields. Yield gaps in poorer countries need to
be closed with better crop genetics and modern ag techniques.
Farming is often demonized as selfish and destructive of the planet. Yet, we need
farmers – especially enlightened farmers – more than ever.
Farmers need to be allowed to innovate and adapt. One example of the
debate around GMOs shows what happens when this goes wrong. Europe is now
the dark continent when it comes to modern molecular crop breeding. Like the
medieval fear of witchcraft, popular suspicion of scientists tinkering with genes
has held back progress for a quarter of a century. That means European farming
is less productive and more chemical-dependent than it would otherwise be.
Hardly a good outcome for the planet.
Ecomodernists want to see science fully applied in agriculture so that farmers can
do their job of growing food in the most sustainable and productive way they can.
There is nothing progressive about trying to block progress. If you’re a farmer
who wants to make the best of your land both for yourself and for future
generations, and if you believe the future can be better than the past, you are
probably an ecomodernist, too.
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