{"title":"Back to the Future: Farming Systems in Transition","authors":"C. Riches","doi":"10.1564/v33_apr_01","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"National policy levers play a central role in shaping agricultural systems. In his timely book Land Renewed: reworking the Countryside Peter Hetherington (2021) challenges British policy makers to form a far more coherent approach for land use supporting the transition towards\n improved national food security, seen through a lens of climate change and biodiversity loss. In the UK there are currently three separate government departments responsible for land, the environment, farming and climate change complicating policy alignment. He points out that without subsidies,\n in the form of area payments, over 60% of all British farms would be running at a loss. The challenge is to improve domestic crop production which currently provides just 60% of the nation's food (Lang, 2020) and hence make the food system more resilient to shocks in international food supply\n chains while addressing the climate emergency. Hetherington documents a number of cases where farmers, collaborating in organisations such as the Nature Friendly Farming Network, are successfully encouraging a resurgence of bird-life through reduced tillage, renewing and planting hedgerows\n and using lower doses of fertilisers, including on larger holdings with over 500 ha. This is perhaps the other side of the coin of the bleak future for biodiversity associated with major broad-acre crops outlined by Dewar (2021) in these pages. However, Hetherington (2021) points out that\n just under half of England's farms produce 2% of total agricultural output, while 8% of them account for over half of it. This implies room for landscape scale nature-friendly farming and even re-wilding, particularly in the uplands, with the caveat that local communities play a central role\n in plans and implementation. With heightened public interest in the climate emergency and biodiversity loss there is increasing desire for food which is local and particularly in food traceability. This is leading to increasingly sophisticated methods to track and publish farming and animal\n welfare standards with supermarket chains requiring producers to adhere to these (e.g., Waitrose and Partners, 2022 one of many examples). Underpinning such standards, methods of carbon accounting which may be applied to soil, whole farms or individual enterprises within the farm have been\n a focus of research for some time (e.g. Goglio et. al. 2015; Abram, 2020). At the most basic level regular soil organic matter tests and a soil management plan will allow British farmers signed up to the entry level of the recently announced Sustainable Farming Incentive (DEFRA, 2022)\n to be \"paid with public funds for providing public goods\". To receive payment, they will also be required to ensure 70% of the farm has a green cover through the winter from December to February and add organic matter, which can be via a green cover crop, on one third of the land each year.\n Currently there is no requirement to demonstrate that soil organic matter is increasing over time – this is assumed. As time goes on however it is possible to envisage more nuanced payments for increasing stored soil carbon, and even a \"market\" developing as is the case with woodland\n creation (Forestry Commission, 2022) as producers become the \"carbon farmers\" of tomorrow as suggested by Korres & Dayan (2020). External inputs including crop protection products will all be included in farm or enterprise carbon budgets. Policy levers are also a focus to regulate the\n quantity of agrochemicals used for crop protection. The European Union's \"Farm to Fork\" and Biodiversity strategies, aim reduce by 50% the use and potential risk of chemical pesticides by 2030 and reduce by 50% the use of the more hazardous pesticides also by 2030, although a recent assessment\n indicates slow and uneven progress towards targets and adoption of IPM measures (European Commission, 2020). Individual countries also take unilateral measures as seen with restrictions on use and in some cases phasing out of the use of glyphosate e.g. by 2024 in Germany (Sustainable Pulse,\n 2022). Glyphosate is a widely used tool for the destruction of green cover crops (e.g. Fogliato, 2020) so alternative approaches will be needed where these are used at scale as part of interventions to build soil health and store carbon.","PeriodicalId":19602,"journal":{"name":"Outlooks on Pest Management","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2022-04-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Outlooks on Pest Management","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1564/v33_apr_01","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"Agricultural and Biological Sciences","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1
Abstract
National policy levers play a central role in shaping agricultural systems. In his timely book Land Renewed: reworking the Countryside Peter Hetherington (2021) challenges British policy makers to form a far more coherent approach for land use supporting the transition towards
improved national food security, seen through a lens of climate change and biodiversity loss. In the UK there are currently three separate government departments responsible for land, the environment, farming and climate change complicating policy alignment. He points out that without subsidies,
in the form of area payments, over 60% of all British farms would be running at a loss. The challenge is to improve domestic crop production which currently provides just 60% of the nation's food (Lang, 2020) and hence make the food system more resilient to shocks in international food supply
chains while addressing the climate emergency. Hetherington documents a number of cases where farmers, collaborating in organisations such as the Nature Friendly Farming Network, are successfully encouraging a resurgence of bird-life through reduced tillage, renewing and planting hedgerows
and using lower doses of fertilisers, including on larger holdings with over 500 ha. This is perhaps the other side of the coin of the bleak future for biodiversity associated with major broad-acre crops outlined by Dewar (2021) in these pages. However, Hetherington (2021) points out that
just under half of England's farms produce 2% of total agricultural output, while 8% of them account for over half of it. This implies room for landscape scale nature-friendly farming and even re-wilding, particularly in the uplands, with the caveat that local communities play a central role
in plans and implementation. With heightened public interest in the climate emergency and biodiversity loss there is increasing desire for food which is local and particularly in food traceability. This is leading to increasingly sophisticated methods to track and publish farming and animal
welfare standards with supermarket chains requiring producers to adhere to these (e.g., Waitrose and Partners, 2022 one of many examples). Underpinning such standards, methods of carbon accounting which may be applied to soil, whole farms or individual enterprises within the farm have been
a focus of research for some time (e.g. Goglio et. al. 2015; Abram, 2020). At the most basic level regular soil organic matter tests and a soil management plan will allow British farmers signed up to the entry level of the recently announced Sustainable Farming Incentive (DEFRA, 2022)
to be "paid with public funds for providing public goods". To receive payment, they will also be required to ensure 70% of the farm has a green cover through the winter from December to February and add organic matter, which can be via a green cover crop, on one third of the land each year.
Currently there is no requirement to demonstrate that soil organic matter is increasing over time – this is assumed. As time goes on however it is possible to envisage more nuanced payments for increasing stored soil carbon, and even a "market" developing as is the case with woodland
creation (Forestry Commission, 2022) as producers become the "carbon farmers" of tomorrow as suggested by Korres & Dayan (2020). External inputs including crop protection products will all be included in farm or enterprise carbon budgets. Policy levers are also a focus to regulate the
quantity of agrochemicals used for crop protection. The European Union's "Farm to Fork" and Biodiversity strategies, aim reduce by 50% the use and potential risk of chemical pesticides by 2030 and reduce by 50% the use of the more hazardous pesticides also by 2030, although a recent assessment
indicates slow and uneven progress towards targets and adoption of IPM measures (European Commission, 2020). Individual countries also take unilateral measures as seen with restrictions on use and in some cases phasing out of the use of glyphosate e.g. by 2024 in Germany (Sustainable Pulse,
2022). Glyphosate is a widely used tool for the destruction of green cover crops (e.g. Fogliato, 2020) so alternative approaches will be needed where these are used at scale as part of interventions to build soil health and store carbon.
国家政策杠杆在形成农业系统方面发挥着核心作用。彼得·赫瑟林顿(Peter Hetherington,2021)在其适时出版的《土地更新:改造乡村》一书中,挑战英国政策制定者,从气候变化和生物多样性丧失的角度,制定一种更加连贯的土地利用方法,支持向改善国家粮食安全过渡。在英国,目前有三个独立的政府部门负责土地、环境、农业和气候变化,使政策协调复杂化。他指出,如果没有以地区付款的形式提供补贴,英国60%以上的农场将处于亏损状态。挑战在于提高目前仅提供全国60%粮食的国内作物产量(Lang,2020),从而使粮食系统在应对气候紧急情况的同时,更能抵御国际粮食供应链的冲击。Hetherington记录了一些案例,在这些案例中,农民与自然友好农业网络等组织合作,通过减少耕作、更新和种植树篱以及使用较低剂量的化肥,包括在500公顷以上的较大土地上,成功地鼓励了鸟类的复苏。这也许是Dewar(2021)在这些页面中概述的与主要大面积作物相关的生物多样性前景黯淡的硬币的另一面。然而,Hetherington(2021)指出,英格兰不到一半的农场生产的农业总产量为2%,而其中8%的农场占总产量的一半以上。这意味着有空间进行景观规模的自然友好型农业,甚至重新开垦,特别是在高地,但需要注意的是,当地社区在计划和实施中发挥着核心作用。随着公众对气候紧急情况和生物多样性丧失的兴趣增强,人们对当地食品的需求越来越大,尤其是在食品可追溯性方面。这导致了越来越复杂的方法来跟踪和发布农业和动物福利标准,连锁超市要求生产商遵守这些标准(例如,Waitrose and Partners,2022是众多例子之一)。作为这些标准的基础,可以应用于土壤、整个农场或农场内的单个企业的碳核算方法一直是一段时间以来的研究重点(例如Goglio等人,2015;Abram,2020)。在最基本的层面上,定期的土壤有机质测试和土壤管理计划将允许英国农民加入最近宣布的可持续农业激励计划(DEFRA,2022),“用公共资金支付提供公共产品的费用”。为了获得付款,他们还将被要求确保70%的农场在12月至2月的整个冬季都有绿色覆盖,并每年在三分之一的土地上添加有机物,这可以通过绿色覆盖作物实现。目前没有要求证明土壤有机质随着时间的推移而增加——这是假设的。然而,随着时间的推移,随着生产者成为明天的“碳农民”,Korres和Dayan(2020)提出了增加土壤储存碳的更微妙的支付方式,甚至“市场”也在发展,就像林地的创建一样(林业委员会,2022)。包括作物保护产品在内的外部投入将全部纳入农场或企业的碳预算。政策杠杆也是监管用于作物保护的农用化学品数量的重点。欧盟的“农场到餐桌”和生物多样性战略的目标是到2030年将化学农药的使用和潜在风险减少50%,到2030年也将更危险的农药的使用减少50%,尽管最近的评估表明,在实现目标和采取IPM措施方面进展缓慢且不均衡(欧盟委员会,2020)。个别国家还采取单方面措施,限制草甘膦的使用,在某些情况下,例如到2024年在德国逐步停止使用草甘膦(可持续脉冲,2022)。草甘膦是一种广泛使用的破坏绿色覆盖作物的工具(例如,Fogliato,2020),因此在大规模使用这些方法作为建立土壤健康和储存碳的干预措施的一部分时,将需要替代方法。
期刊介绍:
Research and development in the crop protection and crop enhancement sector continues to grow at pace. Those associated with the agriculture and food industries, researchers in academia, government organisations, legislators, and professionals involved with the development and environmental impact of pesticides and biotechnology can all benefit from Outlooks on Pest Management. This bi-monthly journal provides a unique blend of international news and reviews covering all aspects of the management of weeds, pests and diseases through chemistry, biology and biotechnology.