Unless we change course, the US agricultural
system could collapse
Our food supply comes from an environmentally
unsustainable system that is going to unravel
Tom
Philpott
Wed 26 Aug
2020 11.15 BSTLast modified on Wed 26 Aug 2020 14.04 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2020/aug/26/us-farming-agriculture-food-supply-danger
Picture an
ideal dinner plate. If you’re like most Americans, it features a hearty portion
of meat, from animals fattened on midwestern corn and soybeans, and a helping
of vegetables, largely trucked in from California. The unique landscapes we
rely on to deliver this bounty – the twin jewels of the US food system – are
locked in a state of slow-motion ecological unravelling.
California’s
agricultural sector has flourished from decades of easy access to water in one
of the globe’s biggest swaths of Mediterranean climate. The Sierra Nevada, the
spine of mountains that runs along California’s eastern flank, captures an
annual cache of snow that, when it melts, cascades into a network of
government-built dams, canals and aqueducts that deliver irrigation water to
farmers in the adjoining Central Valley. In light-snow years, farmers could tap
aquifers that had built up over millennia to offset the shortfall.
But the
Sierra snowpack has shown an overall declining trend for decades – most
dramatically during the great California drought of 2012-2016 – and it will
dwindle further over the next several decades as the climate warms, a growing
body of research suggests. A 2018 paper by Lawrence Berkeley National
Laboratory researchers articulates the alarming consensus: a “future of
consistent low-to-no snowpack” for the Sierra Nevada, the irrigation jewel of
our vegetable patch.
Even as
snowmelt gushing from the mountains dwindles, the Central Valley farming
behemoth gets ever more ravenous for irrigation water, switching from annual
crops that can be fallowed in dry years to almond and pistachio groves, which
require huge upfront investments and need to be watered every year. As a
result, farm operations are increasingly resorting to tapping the water beneath
them. Between 2002 and 2017, a period including two massive droughts, farmers
siphoned enough water from the valley’s aquifers to fill Louisiana’s Lake
Pontchartrain three times.
As the
water vanishes, the ground settles and sinks in uneven and unpredictable ways,
a phenomenon known as subsidence. By 2017, large sections of the Central Valley
were sinking by as much as 2ft a year. In addition to damaging roads, bridges,
houses, sewage pipes and pretty much all built infrastructure, subsidence
snarls up the canals that carry snowmelt from the Sierra Nevada. Thus we have a
vicious circle: reduced snowmelt means less water flowing through
government-run irrigation channels, which pushes farmers to pump more water
from underground, causing more subsidence that damages those channels and
reduces their flow capacity, pushing farmers to accelerate the cycle by pumping
more water from underground.
There’s no great mystery about how to halt the
withering away of California’s water or Iowa’s soil
Seventeen
hundred miles to the east, the prevailing agriculture system consumes a
different but equally precious resource: soil. When white settlers seized what
we now call the corn belt from indigenous inhabitants in the 19th century, they
found thousands of miles of prairies and marshlands, with hundreds of species
of perennial wild grasses, legumes and flowers that towered over their heads,
with roots plunging just as deep into the earth, burying carbon from the
atmosphere and feeding a teeming web of micro-organisms that break down and
cycle nutrients. Aboveground, vast herds of bison ate their way through fields,
stimulating new plant growth and recycling nutrients through their manure.
Interactions
between Native Americans, plants, animals, microbes and climate left behind a
majestic store of fertile topsoil that scientists call mollisol. Even today,
the US midwest boasts the largest of four major mollisol stores on the planet.
Mollisols develop over millennia yet can be squandered in decades. US
colonial-settler agriculture transformed this ecological niche, a land mass 1.5
times the size of California, into a factory churning out just two crops – corn
and soybeans.
This kind
of agriculture fouls water as a matter of course. Since corn and soybeans are
planted in the spring and harvested in the fall, the vast majority of corn-belt
farmland lies bare for the winter months, leaving the ground naked when storms
hit. These deluges pummel bare topsoil and send it – and the agrochemicals and
manure farmers apply to it – cascading off farms and into streams and creeks
that flow into rivers, lakes and ultimately the Gulf of Mexico. But there’s
another problem with subjecting the land to the same two crops every year: loss
of the region’s precious black topsoil. According to research by the soil
scientist Rick Cruse, Iowa – and much of the surrounding corn belt – is losing
soil at a rate 16 times the pace of natural replenishment.
Again,
climate change is a driver. Today’s farmers encounter a weather regime
radically different from that of their grandparents: more intense off-season
storms, and thus ever-heavier pressure on the soil. If global greenhouse gases
continue rising, the region faces a 40% increase in precipitation by the late
21st century, according to the Fourth National Climate Assessment. The soil
that makes one of the globe’s most important growing regions so productive is
vanishing before our eyes, degrading a crucial food production region at the
very time when climate change and global population growth call for building
resilience.
There’s no
great mystery about how to halt the withering away of California’s water or
Iowa’s soil. California needs to shrink its agricultural footprint to match the
scale of its water resources, which means other regions of the US should ramp
up their own fruit and vegetable production to make up the difference. In the
corn belt, US federal farm policy should stop paying farmers to overproduce
corn and soybeans, and instead push them to diversify their plantings and keep
their land covered all winter – practices known to maintain high levels of
production while also preserving soil, decreasing water pollution and slashing
the need for pesticides and fertilizers.
Reduced
demand for agrichemicals, however, pinches the bottom line of the agrichemical
behemoths, and a turn from corn-and-soybean dominance will dent profits for the
meat companies that rely on cheap, overproduced feed. These companies divert a
share of their income into lobbying and campaign finance, and their interests
shape US farm policy. But it doesn’t have to be that way. Just as creating a
sane climate policy requires the rise of a social movement to negate the power
of the fossil fuel lobby, a better agricultural regime will require a direct
political challenge to big agribusiness.
Climate
justice and food justice are, in fact, the same fight – the struggle to beat
back corporate dominance and make the world livable for everyone.
Tom
Philpott is the agriculture correspondent for Mother Jones and the author of
Perilous Bounty: The Looming Collapse of American Farming and How We Can
Prevent It
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