 |
 |
 |
Regenerating the Environment
|
|
Preferred State:
Sustainable environmental systems for 100% of humanity;
topsoil conserved and regenerated
Problem State:
26 billion tons of topsoil eroded per year
Strategy 10: Preserving Cropland
The cropland fertilization and sustainable agriculture program
(Strategies 1B and 1C), for example,
must be supported by a project to conserve topsoil and the
prevention of desertification throughout the world. By converting
the one-tenth of the world's most vulnerable cropland (128
million hectares) that is simultaneously most susceptible
to erosion, the location of the most severe erosion, and the
land that is no longer able to sustain economically viable
agriculture, to pasture or woodland- and conserving and regenerating
the topsoil on the remaining lands through sustainable farming
techniques-the non-sustainable loss of topsoil and the advance
of the deserts can be virtually halted.(108)
The conversion of vulnerable lands to non-erosion prone uses
and the teaching of sustainable farming methods that conserve
topsoil on remaining croplands can be accomplished through
a combination of government regulation and economic incentive
programs that remove the most vulnerable lands from crop production,
and by farmer education through vastly expanded in-country
extension services that teach/demonstrate sustainable agriculture
and soil management techniques. Economic programs such as
the making of credit available to small scale farmers and
women food producers would help in the transition. Loss of
food production on marginally arable lands would be outweighed
by the markedly increased productivity of remaining lands
due to the cropland fertilization program. As these croplands
are improved to maintain the soil and moisture-retaining organic
content that they require to flourish, farming would become
more stable and prosperous with the destabilizing influences
of drought and desertification lessened. Farmers on endangered
lands who are displaced from agriculture production could
be trained and employed as tree planters (see below, Strategy
11) or as land preservation and regeneration specialists.
Costs/Benefits
The cost for such a program of topsoil protection would average
about $24 billion per year for ten years-$16 billion would
be spent on converting vulnerable lands and $8 billion on
conserving topsoil on the remaining lands.(109)
This is about $3 billion less than the current $27
billion per year cost of farmland loss on US farms(110)
and about 3% of the world's total annual military expenditures.
It is also about half the amount spent by the US and European
governments on price subsidies to their farmers and about
half what is spent in subsidies to the fishing industry around
the world by governments.(111)
Benefits include soil retention and sustained or increased
crop production, healthier air due to fewer dust particles
and airborne diseases, more stable settlements for farming
communities (which will lessen migratory pressures on cities),
clearer and healthier river systems which would carry less
run-off and provide better drinking water. Long-term benefits
include the continuing presence of a healthy soil system and
ecosystem to support the world's population.
Next Strategy >
What the World Wants Chart >
Eighteen Strategies...
...for tackling the major problems confronting humanity:
1. Eliminate Starvation and Malnourishment >
2. Provide Health Care & AIDS Control >
3. Provide Shelter >
4. Provide Clean Safe Water >
5. Eliminate Illiteracy >
6. Provide Clean, Safe Energy: Efficiency >
7. Provide Clean, Safe Energy: Renewables >
8. Retire Developing Nations Debt >
9. Stabilize Population >
10. Prevent Soil Erosion (current page)
11. Stop Deforestation >
12. Stop Ozone Depletion >
13. Prevent Acid Rain >
14. Prevent Global Warming >
15. Remove Landmines >
16. Refugee Relief >
17. Eliminating Nuclear Weapons >
18. Build Democracy >
*Sources:
The What the World Wants Project
is by Medard Gabel and the research staff of the World Game
Institute. The material in this section of Media Hell is quoted
directly from that research. Credits, Major References & Footnotes > |