sustainable agriculture pushing back the desert

5
Sustainable Agriculture Pushing Back the Desert Desertifcation – land degrading into desert – is oten blamed on mismanagement and misuse o land. Local people are allegedly guilty o over-arming, over-grazing and allowing their populations to exceed the environment s capacity. Debates concerning natural resources often pivot on a ‘received wisdom’ about environmental change and people’s role in this process. In the case of the environment, the received wisdom is that people invariably degrade natural resources. Outsiders, perceiving environmental change as degradation, blame local land-use practices. The dominant idea about desertication has been that dryland environments are rapidly degraded by a combination of natural and human factors. Desertication is dened as the degradation of drylands, involving loss of biological or economic productivity and comple!ity. "rom the #$%&s, the blame was laid largely on the land use practices of farmers and herders, and on increasing populations. This was reinforced in the late #$'&s and early #$(&s, culminating in the )* +onference on Desertication in #$''. ome scientists were uncertain about the causes and e!tent of desertication, and e!pressed concern at the lac of long-term data. Despite that, the +onference ended by stating that desertication was threatening #$ of the earth’s surface, and that this threat came from increased intensity of land use, overgra/ing and inappropriate irrigation, e!acerbated by drought. uch claims were reiterated by the )* 0nvironment 1rogramme, which was the driving force for the )* +onvention to +ombat Desertication 2)*++D3, which entered into force in #$$4. The rationale for the +onvention is that 5over 67& million people are directly a8ected by desertication, and some one thousand million 2or one billion3 are at ris 9. Over the past two decades, the problem of land degradation in dryland regions has continued to worsen5. :et, evidence has been mounting that some of these assertions are unfounded. ;ost received wisdom on ‘desertication’ and ‘land degradation’ assumes an e<uilibrium environment with linear development. Thus, observations of e!panding desert at certain periods and certain locations are e!trapolated as ongoing, even accelerating, desertication. "or instance, wor in northern udan that estimated the desert edge had

Upload: sandeep-mittal

Post on 08-Oct-2015

12 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

ss

TRANSCRIPT

Sustainable Agriculture Pushing Back the Desert.doc.docx

Sustainable Agriculture Pushing Back the DesertDesertification land degrading into desert is often blamed on mismanagement and misuse of land. Local people are allegedly guilty of over-farming, over-grazing and allowing their populations to exceed the environments capacity.Debates concerning natural resources often pivot on a received wisdom about environmental change and peoples role in this process. In the case of the environment, the received wisdom is that people invariably degrade natural resources. Outsiders, perceiving environmental change as degradation, blame local land-use practices.The dominant idea about desertification has been that dryland environments are rapidly degraded by a combination of natural and human factors. Desertification is defined as the degradation of drylands, involving loss of biological or economic productivity and complexity.From the 1930s, the blame was laid largely on the land use practices of farmers and herders, and on increasing populations. This was reinforced in the late 1970s and early 1980s, culminating in the UN Conference on Desertification in 1977. Some scientists were uncertain about the causes and extent of desertification, and expressed concern at the lack of long-term data. Despite that, the Conference ended by stating that desertification was threatening 19% of the earths surface, and that this threat came from increased intensity of land use, overgrazing and inappropriate irrigation, exacerbated by drought.Such claims were reiterated by the UN Environment Programme, which was the driving force for the UN Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD), which entered into force in 1996. The rationale for the Convention is that "over 250 million people are directly affected by desertification, and some one thousand million (or one billion) are at risk. Over the past two decades, the problem of land degradation in dryland regions has continued to worsen".Yet, evidence has been mounting that some of these assertions are unfounded. Most received wisdom on desertification and land degradation assumes an equilibrium environment with linear development. Thus, observations of expanding desert at certain periods and certain locations are extrapolated as ongoing, even accelerating, desertification.For instance, work in northern Sudan that estimated the desert edge had shifted 90-100 km southwards in 17 years, is often cited. Whilst the period and location of the study was limited, it produced widespread understanding that "the whole southern Saharan edge" was expanding at a rate of 6 km a year. These results were later disproved.In the first instance, there are in effect three related but distinct phenomena drought, dessication and dryland degradation that have been conflated in the term desertification. On a continuum, these have increasing time-scale effects and decreasing potential for recovery.In particular, drought pulses are now seen as a key driving force ofdynamicecological systems droughts lead to variability in ecosystem process and productivity, not its decline. And in many cases, what was assumed as dryland degradation is actually a result of drought, and can reverse quickly under normal rainfall. Additionally, data from dry years were often compared with that from wet years, ignoring longer-term climatic cycles. This led to an interpretation of a decline in productivity, rather than a variation in the response of natural vegetation or crops to soil moisture availability.The new understanding is that arid and semi-arid areas arenon-equilibriumenvironments, characterised by high levels of temporal and spatial variability and therefore, are unpredictable and uncertain. The critical indicator is a high coefficient of variation in rainfall (30% or more). Rainfall doesnt follow regular patterns, at least not in the short-term, and it affects variability of patterns and amount of vegetation.This dynamic conception of drylands is underpinned by changes within ecological thinking - the new ecology that have suggested that nature is in a state of continuous change. It contests conventional ecology, which depicts nature as tending toward stability, with notions of carrying capacity and assumptions of a stable climax at equilibrium i.e. if the carrying capacity is exceeded, deterioration occurs.The new ecology also involves a conception of historical time. Land that appears degraded may have already been that way long before farming or grazing. Researchers might erroneously associate degraded land with destructive human activity while knowing little of a places environmental history.Dynamic ecological systems mean that ecological drivers are external in dryland environments, and hence not necessarily subject to density-dependent events. Instead, human livelihood adaptations in these environments are very specialised; people are in reality raising meat and crops under ecologically sound conditions.New research reveals that in many of the poorest African countries along the Saharas edge, in Nigeria, Niger, Senegal, Burkina Faso and Kenya, integrated farming, mixed cropping and traditional soil and water conservation methods are increasing per capita food production several fold, keeping well ahead of population growth.For example, the use of sheep manure for fertiliser has allowed increased yields for farmers in Kano, Nigeria. Additionally, planting leguminous crops increases nutrient levels in the soil by fixing nitrogen from the air. Integration of crops and livestock enhances nutrient cycling legumes and manure return to the soil what crops take out.A 4-year study in eastern Burkina Faso found that despite declining rainfall since the late 1950s and increasing populations, there is no evidence of land degradation connected to human activities nor a decline in food productivity. Conversely, yields of many crops have risen. The study found no proof of soil fertility decline over 30 years.Farmers have not achieved environmental sustainability through a capital-intensive or high-tech path. In Burkina Faso, the increased yields of sorghum, millet and groundnuts is hardly attributable to increased external inputs, because these crops receive little fertiliser and are largely based on hand hoe cultivation.Farmers have a rich repertoire of soil and water conservation technologies, such as crop sequencing, crop rotation, fallowing, weeding, selective clearing, intercropping, appropriate crop & landrace selection, adapted plant spacing, thinning, mulching, stubble grazing, weeding mounds, paddocking, household refuse application, manure application, crop residue application and compost pits. They use many mechanical practices too.Perhaps more important than the practices is the selective way they are used, which vary with different field types, allowing optimal adjustment of limited labour and inputs to the requirements of different crops and soils. If land becomes limited, farmers do not need to invent new management systems; they apply these soil and water conservation practicesmore intensively, and only when and where needed.High local population densities, far from being a liability, are actually essential for providing the necessary labour to work the land, dig terraces and collect water in ponds for irrigation, and to control weeds, tend fields, feed animals and spread manure. As population densities increase, farmers intensify their cooperation systems, grouping to tend each others fields at busy periods, lending and borrowing land, livestock and equipment, and swapping seed varieties.People thus invest heavily in creating and maintaining social networks, such as land networks, labour networks, womens natal networks, cattle networks, technology networks and cash networks.Furthermore, in Maradi district in southern Niger, where repeated droughts have wrought environmental damage, farmers have been fighting back, and have actually reversed desertification. This is also true of Machakos (renamed Makueni) district in Kenya. In the 1930s, British colonial scientists condemned the eroding, bare hills of the drought-prone area to environmental oblivion. This narrative was consistently reproduced in the 1950s and 1970s. Yet, while there have been droughts, the hills are greener, less eroded and more productive today than before, despite a fivefold population increase. The local Akamba people had responded to the droughts by switching from herding cattle to settled farming, giving them incentive to work the land effectively."This is no high-tech breakthrough, nor a result of Western aid programmes". A major reason for the overestimation of land degradation is the underestimation of local farmers abilities.This demonstrates the importance of relying and building on local peoples knowledge and practices. Many external interventions have usurped and undermined local systems of decision-making and resource management. Its time to turn the received wisdom on its head, and learn from local communities, instead of blaming them wholesale for land degradation.In light of all this evidence, a new realism now exists about desertification, which gives climatic variation equal footing with human activities, as a cause. The UNCCD now takes care to point out the reversibility of drought, the influence of climatic variation, and recognises that the causes of desertification are complex, as is the human-environment relationship.Policies need to appreciate the inherent uncertainty in science. Opportunistic management, i.e. seizing opportunities to evade problems, working within complex systems, adapting to instability and exploiting environmental instability, is needed for dynamic ecosystems.Dynamic ecological theory does not replace conventional theory but is more appropriate in some contexts, such as in dryland ecosystems. Environmental complexity doesnt lend itself to simple, linear or reductionist technological fixes. Ecosystems are dynamic wholes and sustainable agriculture works in tandem with these (see Box), as local farmers in Africa are showing.Sustainable agriculture

makes best use of natures goods and services by integrating natural, regenerative processes e.g. nutrient cycling, nitrogen fixation, soil regeneration and natural enemies of pests

minimises non-renewable inputs (pesticides and fertilisers) that damage the environment or harm human health

relies on the knowledge and skills of farmers

promotes and protects social capital - peoples capacities to work together to solve common management problems

depends on locally-adapted practices to innovate in the face of uncertainty

contributes to public goods, such as clean water, wildlife, carbon sequestration in soils, flood protection and landscape quality