Home > In Focus > An Agro-Ecological Transition to Beat the Diktats of the Green Revolution

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By Ruchi Shroff, Navdanya International – Lifegate, 27 April 2018 | Source

A transition towards agroecology is needed to beat the diktats of a production model that is poisoning our Planet and our lives.

Agroecology represents a solution to the interconnected crises of our time, not only in the agricultural sector, but also in the economic and social spheres. For over thirty years Navdanya, together with other civil society organizations from all over the world, has been promoting a regenerating and ecologic circular approach to contrast the rising environmental degradation, poverty, sanitary emergencies and malnutrition. Changing the current extractive agricultural paradigm, based on the one-way exploitation of nature’s resources and wealth, is to be considered a priority of our times.

The green revolution is no longer sustainable

A paradigm change of which, at last, the FAO has taken notice in the occasion of the Second Symposium on Agroecology held in Rome from 3 to 5 April. This is an important step in the right direction, considering that both the intervention of FAO Director General Graziano da Silva and the final document of the Symposium are denouncing the un-sustainability of the industrial agricultural model of the Green Revolution. In fact, they highlight how agroecology directly contributes to some of the most important SDGs (Sustainable Development Goals), such as poverty and hunger eradication, guaranteeing the quality of education, the achievement of gender equality, increased efficiency in water use, the promotion of decent work conditions, guaranteeing sustainable consumption and production, consolidation of climate resilience, sustainable use of marine resources and stop the biodiversity loss.

Agroecology as a vision of life preserving biodiversity

The studies and results of the projects presented by the over 350 civil society organizations present at the symposium prove how agroecology works and could possibly work even better with governmental and scientific research support. The FAO has recognised the importance of farmers’ traditional knowledge and their crucial role on the food security issue. As such, what small producers and consumers must claim is a new agricultural and economic paradigm, a food culture based on health, in which ecological responsibility and economic justice take precedence over today’s extractive production systems based on consumption and profits. Farmers and consumers participation is essential to succeed in overcoming a production model that is poisoning our Planet and life, as well as to promote a new production model that preserves biodiversity and promotes environmental sustainability. Agroecology is, in fact, not only a set of techniques, but a whole vision of life, based on the concept of integration between human beings and nature, as underlined by the Declaration of small producers and civil society organizations.

Industrial farming isn’t feeding the world

The present industrial food system, based on monocultures, widespread use of agrochemicals, commercialization of genetically modified seeds, and supported by neoliberal policies and trade liberalization, represents a serious threat with high social, environmental and health costs. Over the years, we have allowed multinational companies to consolidate their monopolies and gain control of our seeds, food and health. Industrial agriculture was founded and promoted on the erroneous idea that increasing low-cost food production was a necessary step to feed the growing world population. However, after having contaminated a consistent part of the soil and aquifers, damaged, in many cases irreparably, biodiversity and decisively contributed to the worsening of the present climate crisis, industrial agriculture can claim only a relatively small portion of the global food production. The majority of the food we consume is, in fact, still produced by small and medium farmers, while the vast majority of crops coming from the industrial sector, such as maize and soya, is mainly used as animal feed or to produce biofuels. It is the failure of the green revolution, given that the “increase of production and productivity has reached a high environmental cost”, as Da Silva underlined, without solving the issue of world hunger. In 2016, 815 million people have suffered from malnutrition, while over 1.9 billion adults worldwide were overweight, with more than 650 million being obese.

Sovereignty is the starting point

The problem isn’t productivity itself, but distribution, poverty and food quality. We must promote food sovereignty, starting from seed sovereignty and prevent multinational companies from taking control over our democracies and food production systems. With the evident failure of the green revolution, it is necessary to stop a productive model which deprives small farmers of the means to guarantee their own livelihoods, expels rural populations from their lands to make way for industrial agriculture, and reduces biodiversity in favour of monocultures.

In this scenario, consumers have no choice but to buy unhealthy food, cultivated in contaminated soils and poisoned by chemicals. Another side effect of the green revolution, highlighted by FAO’s DG, is that “the widespread use of chemical fertilizers and pesticides has contributed to soil degradation, water pollution and biodiversity loss”. A correct statement, to which it would be useful to add the estimated number of loss of human lives recently asserted by Hilal Elver, UN Special Rapporteur on the right to food, who revealed how pesticides have “catastrophic effects on the environment, human health and society as a whole”, and are responsible for around 200,000 deaths per year.

Beyond the myths and propaganda created by the multinationals, there is much knowledge, research and cases to state that we don’t need to use agro-toxic products to produce our food. When farmers are sovereign in agriculture, ranging from seeds to agricultural inputs, reducing trade dependency and building resilience by using local resources, agricultural systems become ecologically, socially and economically sustainable. Industrial agriculture has not only contributed to damaging the environment, reducing nutrients in crops and increasing health problems, but has also had a major impact on climate change. Nowadays, industrial agriculture and globalised food system are responsible for 40 per cent of all greenhouse gas emissions. Moreover, monocultures are vulnerable to unstable climate conditions. A study conducted by Navdanya in India in four different agro-ecosystems (dry, semi-dry, sub-humid and humid) showed how organic agriculture can help mitigate climate change and increases resilience.

FAO and other UN organisations are now called to increase their efforts to support agroecology in the world and to help civil society organizations and small producers in putting pressure on governments in order to take appropriate measures to diversify commercial policies, launch new public programmes for education, technical and financial assistance, for the recognition and promotion of agroecology.


Also read:

Navdanya at FAO 2nd International Symposium on Agroecology

Rome, Italy, 3 – 5 April 2018

An Agroecological Transition is Necessary to Achieve the UN Sustainable Development Goals

By Manlio Masucci, Navdanya International, 17 April 2018