Agri Kultuur October / Oktober 2014 | Page 16

The solution to declining natural resources and food security Article by Dr Hendrik Smith CA Facilitator, GRAIN SA Each year, 12 million hectares of land in the world, where 20 million tonnes of grain could have been grown, are lost to land degradation. In the past 40 years, 30 percent of the planet’s arable (food-producing) land has become unproductive due to erosion. Unless this trend is reversed soon, feeding the world’s growing population will be impossible. W orldwide there is consensus that plough-based farming, still widely practised, has unsustainable elements, whose continued promotion and application endangers global capacities to respond to the food security concerns. Ploughing and removal of crop residues after harvest leave soil naked and vulnerable to wind and rain, resulting in gradual, often unnoticed erosion of soil. This is like tire wear on your car — unless given the attention and respect it deserves, catastrophe is only a matter of time. Erosion also puts carbon into the air where it contributes to climate change. In South Africa, crop production systems based on intensive and No-till planters planting directly into maize residue. Photo: Hannes Otto continuous soil tillage have led to excessively high soil degradation rates in grain producing areas. This adds to the growing problems with profitability and poverty in some of the rural areas. According to a recent study by the Agricultural Research Council (ARC) in South Africa, the average soil loss under annual crops (such as grain and cotton) in the country is 13 ton ha -1yr-1, which is much higher than the natural soil formation rate. If we have to offer farmers a better chance to survive on the farm and if sustainable and economically viable agriculture and food security is to be achieved, then the paradigms of agriculture production and management must be changed. There is general agreement among Sustainable CA cropping systems for smallholders. Photo: Hendrik Smith key role players, such as government, research institutions and producer’s organisations (such as Grain SA), that these outcomes will be achieved through the adoption and implementation of Conservation Agriculture (CA). CA is seen as an ideal system for sustainable and climate-smart agricultural intensification, through which farmers can attain higher levels of productivity and profitability (i.e. ‘green prosperity’) while improving soil health and the environment. Conservation Agriculture (CA) is an approach to managing agroecosystems for improved and sustained productivity, increased profits and food security while preserving and enhancing the resource base and the environment. Oxen-drawn no-till planter for smallholders. Photo: Hendrik Smith