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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/10174/19604
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Title: | Mobilizing Greater Crop and Land Potentials Sustainably |
Authors: | Kassam, A. Basch, G. Friedrich, T. González-Sánchez, E. Triviño-Tarradas, P. Mkomwa, S. |
Issue Date: | 2-Jun-2016 |
Publisher: | Geographical Institute, Research Centre for Astronomy and Earth Sciences, Hungarian Academy of Sciences |
Citation: | Kassam, A., Basch, G., Friedrich, T., Gonzalez, E., Trivino, P., Mkomwa, S. 2016. Mobilizing Greater Crop and Land Potentials Sustainably. Book of Abstracts of the International Conference on Conservation
Agriculture and Sustainable Land Use. Budapest, 31 May - 2 June, p. 50 |
Abstract: | The supply side of the food security engine is the way we farm. The current engine of
conventional tillage farming is faltering and needs to be replaced. This presentation will address
supply side issues of agriculture to meet future agricultural demands for food and industry using
the alternate no-till Conservation Agriculture (CA) paradigm (involving no-till farming with
mulch soil cover and diversified cropping) that is able to raise productivity sustainably and
efficiently, reduce inputs, regenerate degraded land, minimise soil erosion, and harness the flow
of ecosystem services. CA is an ecosystems approach to farming capable of enhancing not only
the economic and environmental performance of crop production and land management, but also
promotes a mindset change for producing ‘more from less’, the key attitude towards sustainable
production intensification. CA is now spreading globally in all continents at an annual rate of 10
Mha and covers some 157 Mha of cropland.
Today global agriculture produces enough food to feed three times the current population of
7.21 billion. In 1976, when the world population was 4.15 billion, world food production far
exceeded the amount necessary to feed that population. However, our urban and industrialised
lifestyle leads to wastage of food of some 30%-40%, as well as waste of enormous amount of
energy and protein while transforming crop-based food into animal-derived food; we have a
higher proportion of people than ever before who are obese; we continue to degrade our
ecosystems including much of our agricultural land of which some 400 Mha is reported to be
abandoned due to severe soil and land degradation; and yields of staple cereals appear to have
stagnated. These are signs of unsustainability at the structural level in the society, and it is at the
structural level, for both supply side and demand side, that we need transformed mind sets about
production, consumption and distribution.
CA not only provides the possibility of increased crop yields for the low input smallholder
farmer, it also provides a pro-poor rural and agricultural development model to support
agricultural intensification in an affordable manner. For the high output farmer, it offers greater
efficiency (productivity) and profit, resilience and stewardship. For farming anywhere, it
addresses the root causes of agricultural land degradation, sub-optimal ecological crop and land
potentials or yield ceilings, and poor crop phenotypic expressions or yield gaps.
As national economies expand and diversify, more people become integrated into the economy
and are able to access food. However, for those whose livelihoods continue to depend on
agriculture to feed themselves and the rest of the world population, the challenge is for agriculture
to produce the needed food and raw material for industry with minimum harm to the environment
and the society, and to produce it with maximum efficiency and resilience against abiotic and
biotic stresses, including those arising from climate change. There is growing empirical and
scientific evidence worldwide that the future global supplies of food and agricultural raw
materials can be assured sustainably at much lower environmental and economic cost by shifting
away from conventional tillage-based food and agriculture systems to no-till CA-based food and
agriculture systems. To achieve this goal will require effective national and global policy and
institutional support (including research and education). |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10174/19604 |
Type: | article |
Appears in Collections: | FIT - Artigos em Livros de Actas/Proceedings MED - Artigos em Livros de Actas/Proceedings
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