{"id":11260,"date":"2021-09-03t17:00:51","date_gmt":"2021-09-03t17:00:51","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/dpetrov.2create.studio\/planet\/wordpress\/recipes-for-food-security-the-new-big-ag-what-regenerative-agriculture-can-learn-from-conventional-farming\/"},"modified":"2021-09-03t17:00:51","modified_gmt":"2021-09-03t17:00:51","slug":"tregenerative-agriculture-conventional-farming","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"\/\/www.getitdoneaz.com\/story\/tregenerative-agriculture-conventional-farming\/","title":{"rendered":"recipes for food security | the new ‘big ag’: what regenerative agriculture can learn from conventional farming"},"content":{"rendered":"

in the words of his twitter profile, chris newman of sylvanaqua farms in montross, virginia, is \u201csomething else.” he is one of an increasing number of farmers attempting to challenge industrial agriculture with a sustainable alternative. he is also black and indigenous in a predominantly white field\u2014and a fierce critic of how the sustainable farming movement operates and the assumptions at its root. <\/p>\n

newman developed his farm with a vision to provide equitable access to fresh, nutritious food to residents of the washington metro area and other cities in maryland and virginia. it\u2019s a tall order. while newman has access to nearly 2,000 acres, the farm currently operates on 120 acres with a team of 7 and is focused on the production of beef, pork, chicken, and eggs.<\/p>\n

newman\u2019s goal of accessible, sustainable food places him at odds with the dominant practices and intellectual framework of both industrial agriculture and small, sustainable farming. in contrast to the factory farms typical of industrial agriculture, his cattle are entirely grass-fed and his pigs forage in managed woodland\u2014creating a double benefit that both minimizes the use of external grain feed and contributes to his development of a food forest. yet, unlike some organic suppliers, he prioritizes accessibility of his food; this year, he launched a food donation program to provide for the hungry in addition to his wealthier customer base. true to his twitter bio, newman\u2019s approach to the business of sustainable farming is \u201csomething else\u201d\u2014something outside of existing models. <\/p>\n

broadly speaking, there have been two streams of alternative agriculture: one which seeks to reform the agribusiness industry from within, and one which seeks to challenge it from outside. gunsmoke farms<\/a> is an example of the former. owned by general mills, gunsmoke\u2019s 34,000 acres in fort pierre, south dakota, supply the needs of the company\u2019s organic products, such as annie\u2019s organic mac & cheese. besides avoiding the use of synthetic pesticides and fertilizers, the initial plan for the farm included the use of cover cropping, no-till planting, and other practices aimed at building soil health and bolstering the surrounding ecosystem. three years later, however, these plans have failed to materialize<\/a>, leading to the degradation and erosion of soil on the farm, and drawing public criticism.<\/p>\n

the second stream of agricultural reform centers on a rejection of big business, and sees the solution as a myriad of small, individual farms serving the needs of their local communities. polyface farms, owned by virginia farmer joel salatin, is a quintessential example. salatin is something of a heavyweight in sustainable farming spheres: he has been hailed as america\u2019s most famous farmer<\/a>, his 550-acre livestock farm was named the mecca of sustainable agriculture<\/a>, and he has published 11 books<\/a> which teach his methods and philosophy.<\/p>\n

\n

the global context<\/strong><\/h1>\n

while farms and their business models are a major part of reforming food systems, government policy provides the structure under which this plays out. one country that experiences significant success on this front is denmark, where organic products comprise 12% to 13% of the total food market\u2014and 30% to 50%<\/a> of sales of basic goods such as produce, eggs, and milk, according to paul holmbeck, director of the nonprofit organic denmark. for comparison, the organic market share for produce, eggs, and milk in the u.s. are 12%<\/a>, 8%<\/a>, and 1%<\/a>, respectively. this difference becomes more stark when considering the danish organic standard that is stricter and encompasses more sustainable practices than its u.s. counterpart.<\/p>\n

holmbeck attributes this to work by his organization, as well as significant measures by the danish government. organic food has not only found its way into supermarkets, but discount stores, due to organic denmark demonstrating to grocery outlets through market data the profits they stand to gain from stocking organic. this has helped to create broad and affordable access to organic food. additionally, the benefits of organic food, both in terms of human and environmental health, are advertised by the danish government, creating demand for the higher standard of organic food. finally, organic denmark has not shied away from working with agribusiness\u2014which sees the profits to be earned in organic foods\u2014since reforming farming from the inside means easy access to capital and no waste of effort breaking into the market. while danish agriculture is small compared to the giant that is american farming, its example proves that smart policy can encourage movement in the right direction.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n

salatin claims that a farm\u2019s philosophy is just as important as its practices; if anything, it is more important since philosophy forms the root from which practice springs. at polyface, the cows are grass-fed, the pigs forage in the woods, and grain feed for the free-range chickens is locally sourced and non-gmo. according to salatin<\/a>, \u201c[polyface\u2019s] goals are not about sales; they are about quality.\u201d he writes that the organic label is not comprehensive enough and \u201cdoes not incentivize anyone to do better than the minimum standards,\u201d leading to what he calls \u201cindustrial junk organics<\/a>.\u201d <\/p>\n

salatin said his vision<\/a> is \u201cto see a million polyfaces displace all the monsanto and usda demons.\u201d at the same time, he proudly claimed that \u201cpolyface has never had a sales target, marketing plan, or business plan,\u201d which reek far too much of profit-oriented farming to him. instead, expansion of his model depends on a two-tiered value shift. first, farmers must make quality their priority. if they do, \u201ccustomers will come and sales will increase automatically,\u201d he said<\/a>. at the same time, consumers must consciously choose ethical and environmentally responsible farms. in his words<\/a>, \u201cget your nose out of people magazine and research and then patronize food and farm organizations that treat their folks with the values you value.\u201d<\/p>\n

as a single entity, it is impossible to deny the success of polyface. the farm pulls hundreds of thousands of dollars per year in revenue and is proof that regenerative farming can be financially viable. yet, polyface faces a number of problems when it comes to salatin\u2019s goal of mass replication, problems which are representative of small-farm sustainability as a movement\u2013\u2013problems like affordability.<\/p>\n

food from polyface is prohibitively expensive. a dozen eggs sell for $6.75; milk at $11.30 to a gallon. for a purely profit-oriented farm, these prices are not a problem. there are a sufficient number of customers willing and wealthy enough to pay a premium for salatin\u2019s \u201cbeyond organic<\/a>\u201d food that his farm can not only survive, but thrive.<\/p>\n

yet, newman of sylvanaqua said that the success of sustainable farming in business does not necessarily translate to its success as a movement. if the goal of sustainable farming is to reform the food system entirely, sustainably sourced food must be accessible to everybody, not just a wealthy portion of the market. <\/p>\n

salatin is not alone in naming consumer values as the battlefield of sustainable agriculture. he is joined by figures such as alice waters, champion of slow food, who censured<\/a> the nation\u2019s \u201cfast food values,\u201d and wendell berry, author and farmer, whose essay the pleasures of eating<\/a> argued that \u201c[eating] is inescapably an agricultural act, and how we eat determines, to a considerable extent, how the world is used.\u201d in other words, it is consumers who are responsible for the growth of sustainable farming while producers are free from scrutiny.<\/p>\n

newman is skeptical of this shame-and-blame tactic. he said that a critique of behavior may change the habits of an audience which can afford to listen, but $11 milk is simply beyond the reach of a minimum or low-wage worker, no matter how strong the \u201cvalue shift.\u201d newman believes any solution that is centered on altering consumer behavior is doomed to fail\u2014and is either unaware of the realities of poverty and lower-middle income or chooses not to engage with them.<\/p>\n

at sylvanaqua, newman is trying to take the best of both small sustainable farms and industrial agribusiness by pairing commitment to ethical and environmental responsibility with efficiency and productivity. he said that only through this balance can sustainable agriculture be successful, and suggested that many of sustainable agriculture\u2019s shortcomings stem from a reactionary mindset.<\/p>\n

\u201cpart of (the problem) i think is a certain degree of intellectual laziness\u2026big ag is big, so (people think) the solution must be small,\u201d he said. \u201cbig ag is integrated, so (people think) the solution must be to not integrate, to disperse, to only focus on the farming. big ag is all about business, so (people think) sustainable ag must be decidedly non-business.\u201d<\/p>\n

the issue with this response, newman explained, is that it\u2019s simplistic. in rejecting large agribusiness across-the-board, small farmers may reject not only the flaws, but the traits that made industrial agriculture successful\u2014traits like scale. <\/p>\n

according to the usda<\/a>, the class of farms making $100,000-$250,000 per year and the class making $500,000 to $1 million each work about 15% of u.s. farmland. the only difference between the two groups is that the average farm in the former category is about 1,000 acres large, while the average in the latter is just short of 2,000. in other words, fewer, larger farms are able to produce more on the same amount of land than smaller, more numerous ones, thus enabling them to sell at cheaper prices. newman believes that in order to compete, sustainable agriculture must embrace the efficiencies of scale rather than salatin\u2019s million-polyface dream.<\/p>\n

while newman said that farmers need to adopt business models that boost affordability, he said that price is only one part of a larger problem of accessibility. in his estimation, the strategies that small farmers use for selling and distributing their food are fantastically impractical.<\/p>\n

\u201cpeople use farmers markets which only operate one or two days a week, and usually during the day, when people are working\u2026and god help you if it rains,\u201d he said. pickup programs for community supported agriculture shares often fall victim to the same critique, with the added hurdle that the farmer, not the customer, picks the produce, meaning people may not get either what they need or know how to use. even if farm food is affordable, it may not be available. a local, all-hours supermarket is an easier, more accessible way to get food than the intermittent, and sometimes distant options that farmers have on offer.<\/p>\n

acting alone, farmers don\u2019t have the time to sell their food every day of the week, much less for extended hours. and until they do, farmers are limited in the customers they can reach. this problem calls to another tactic from industrial food: vertical integration. not only does this lower the cost of the end product by eliminating middlemen, newman said, it also allows farmers to focus on what they do best, rather than stretching themselves thin and doing everything inadequately. the farm is only one part of the food system, and any successful attempt at reform will have to work on broader scales, he said.<\/p>\n

sylvanaqua does not yet embody all of newman\u2019s ideals. yes, the chickens are free-range, the cattle grass-fed, and the pigs forage in silvopasture-managed woodland with trees whose fruit and nuts supplement the pigs\u2019 diets. yet, in terms of scale, sylvanaqua is a far cry from gunsmoke farms, operating at just 120 acres, which is all that current demand warrants. the prices for his products are high\u2014$5.50 for a dozen eggs, $15 for a pound of bacon. not content to remain this way, newman is aggressively pursuing expansion, most recently through sylvanaqua\u2019s mutual aid program.<\/p>\n

newman created the program this summer in response to the farm\u2019s shortcomings in affordability and accessibility. the process is this: sylvanaqua\u2019s customers are encouraged to buy mutual aid shares along with their other purchases. the shares are also advertised to the tens of thousands of followers of newman\u2019s social media accounts. this money is used to pay for meat and eggs that go to food aid organizations who provide meals in washington, d.c. and other cities in the region.<\/p>\n

\u201cnot everybody has a stove, or cookware, or the expertise, or time to cook the food we have,\u201d newman said. \u201c[these] organizations know how to turn our food into something accessible for people.\u201d <\/p>\n

while these organizations are not owned by sylvanaqua, these collaborations demonstrate the benefits of vertical integration. the program is also helping newman to expand his business. <\/p>\n

\u201cit\u2019s really hard and really expensive to break into new geographic markets,\u201d he said, \u201cbecause it usually starts with three or four people, or it starts with doing a farmer\u2019s market, which are both ways to lose lots of money really quickly. what mutual aid allows us to do is show up to annapolis with $1,000 worth of paid food donations, and\u2026 deliver to three or four regular customers in annapolis without losing money [on transportation and time].\u201d the program has provided over $35,000 in food donations since its inception in late june.<\/p>\n

yet, newman is by no means blind to the shortcomings of agribusiness. like salatin, he sees the problem as one of philosophy and worldview, something evident in his writing.<\/p>\n

\u201cx\u00e0skwim (corn) monocultures are not a white invention,\u201d newman wrote<\/a>. \u201cin fact, my own ancestors planted them. first-contact colonizer accounts describe in detail cornfields that stretched for miles and miles\u2026but these fields weren\u2019t planted every year\u2026(but) with a careful ethic of not taking too much even when a vast monoculture was involved.\u201d <\/p>\n

as newman sees it, big agriculture is not inherently antithetical to sustainability. while the environmental and social problems surrounding the current agricultural system are numerous, it is also necessary to recognize the ways in which it has been successful in bringing food to people. improving food systems requires coupling the best that agribusiness has to offer with people, organizations, and businesses that center people and environment over profit. to reform food, sustainable farming needs to be the new \u201cbig ag.\u201d<\/p>\n

\u2014<\/p>\n

about this series: the planet forward-fao summer storytelling fellows work was sponsored by the north america office of the food and agriculture organization of the united nations (fao), and the fellows were mentored by lisa palmer<\/a>, gw\u2019s national geographic professor of science communication and author of \u201chot, hungry planet.\u201d<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"

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