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Toward Sustainable Agricultural Systems in the 21 st Century. Drivers and constraints. Biggest driver : Industrialization of Agriculture over the last 40 years. Decreased diversity and crop rotations. Vicious Economic Circle for farmers. 1969-2009-Farmers have doubled productivity
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Drivers and constraints • Biggest driver : Industrialization of Agriculture over the last 40 years
Vicious Economic Circle for farmers • 1969-2009-Farmers have doubled productivity • 2009-Earned $40 Billion less than in 1969 in net cash income • Net cash income in 2008 (the best year farmers have had since 1974) was lower than in 1929 • Net cash income in 2009 was near zero essentially the same as in 1932 • Source: Ken Meter, Crossroads Resource Center Minneapolis, MN
What kind of food system do we have today? • 60% of the food comes from only 2% of the farms • Only a handful of corporations control the input, processing, and marketing of most of what we eat • The producer’s share is down to 19 cents of the food dollar
Transformative Changes • Transformative change the last 40 years towards two kinds of agriculture and a shrinking middle class • The new transformative change of the next 40 years • Largely driven by Consumers • Includes all kinds of agriculture, the foundation of which has been certified organic and locally grown
Transformative change • Health impacts and true costs of a “cheap food system” • Emerging research implicates pesticides, hormones, antibiotics, food additives, bio-tech, commodity crops, compromised food safety • Human Diseases- Obesity, Diabetes, Cardiac disease, Cancers, Reproductive and Developmental, Endocrine Disruptions, Asthma and Food Allergies, Attention Deficit Disorder, Early Puberty, E. Coli, Salmonella and a host of other not understood ever- increasing health risks
What transformative changes do we need in Rural America • From the view point of a farmer for 37 years • Negatives: • Loss of farmers, businesses and population • Drain of financial resources off the farm and rural communities • Industrial Agricultural removes much of its profits from rural America • Confining livestock under one roof • The kind of agriculture we have now only financially benefits the few and the very large • Bigger is still considered better by many farmers and people in general- 120 ft wide planters and combines that can harvest 5,000 bushel/hour, 1 million bushel grain bins at the Farm Progress Show
Transformative Changes that we need • More young Farmers • More Credit and entry opportunities • More Rural Infrastructure • Small Meat and animal product processing plants, food processing plants for fruits and vegetables, etc. community kitchens, Institutional food service, development of local and regional food economies • Job opportunities- Iowa could create 6000 jobs if we provided our own fruits and vegetables for our state alone.
Transformative change • Farm program reform- reward green practices of all kinds including energy, CSP is the best example • Tax carbon at the source • Get the livestock back on more farms and spread out with ownership by the farmer not the packer and food retailer. • Get Beef and Dairy cattle back on Grass, recognizing the world-wide climate stability value of grass and consumption of animal products.
Transformative Changes • Public Research $ for the public good • One of the best examples being public plant breeding not the holding hostage of our world’s seeds by a few companies • Access and competition in the market place and “Seeds and Breeds” • More science-based on-farm research in complex farming systems with universities and researchers-Practical Farmers of Iowa • Transformative change in what college students are learning about how food is produced • Transfer of farming skills, knowledge, and experience from farmers like ourselves to the next generation of farmers