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Sustainable Agriculture

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Especially nutritional development in the pork industry Post-industrial approaches Less input intensive farming methods Focus on value and quality Civic ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Sustainable Agriculture


1
Sustainable Agriculture
  • A natural part of the structural adjustment
    process ?

2
Sustainable Agriculturebalance three main goals
  • Environmental health
  • Economic profitability
  • Socio-economic equity

3
Commodity agriculture
  • Agriculture is incorporated into an global and
    corporate-controlled food system
  • Driven by twin goals of productivity and
    efficiency
  • Maximizing profitability by balancing 1) land 2)
    labor 3) capital and 4) management

4
Why the change
  • Industrial Agriculture now creates multiple
    problems
  • - threat to the environment
  • - threat to natural resources
  • - threat to the quality of life for
  • farmers and rural communities
    - and the society as a hole

5
Approaches to change
  • Government can regulate and set standards code
    of best practice
  • Let the invisible hand of the market do the job
  • Post industrial approaches people driven
    solutions

6
The Dutch Manure Quota System
  • Regulation and markets to achieve
  • environmental outcomes
  • and
  • Sustain rural communities

7
The Dutch System of Manure Quota
Over-application of manure effluent can result in
runoff and ponding of water on the soil surface.
Both activities can lead to surface and ground
water contamination. Bacteria and nitrate are
the two most dangerous pollutants in drinking
water
Impact on human health especially infants Also
reduced vitality and increase stillbirth, low
birth weight and slow weight gain in livestock
8
Holland The Environmental Problem in Animal
Agriculture
  • Between the early 1960s and the mid 1980s
  • Pigs increased by 10 million (450)
  • Poultry increased by 50 million (125)
  • Consequently, a manure surplus developed of 19
  • The EU standard of 50mg of nitrate pr liter of
    groundwater was exceeded on 60 of agricultural
    land
  • First warning sounded in the 1970s

9
1st Policy Action A Moratorium
  • the Interim Law for Restriction of Pig and
    Poultry Farms (November 1984).
  • No new farms in the worst affected areas
  • Restrictions on expansions on existing farms
    (10)
  • It was not enough
  • the number of pigs went up with 7.5 per year
    from 1983 to 1987
  • Eutrophication of surface and ground water became
    of international concern (cut nutrients into
    North Sea by 50)

10
The 3 Phase Plan
  • Phase I 1987 1990
  • The Manure Law (Phosphate control)
  • Manure quota and book-keeping system
  • The Soil Protection Act
  • Application rates and timing of land application
  • Phase II 1991 1994
  • The Environmental Management Act
  • Guidelines on ammonia and cattle farming under
    the Nuisance Act
  • Phase III 1995 2000
  • Markets for manure quotas established

11
Overview of the Quota System
  • Manure production rights limited to 125 kg of
    phosphate per hectare
  • Farmer grandfathered a reference amount
  • Based on inventory of animals and standards for
    manure production for 3 animal categories
  • Cattle and turkey
  • Goat, sheep, fox, nutria and ducks
  • Swine and poultry
  • Difference between phosphate intake through feed
    and output through meat, egg etc
  • Established phosphate deficit and surplus farms
  • Deficit farmers could continue to expand
  • Surplus farmers needed additional registered
    manure production rights for expansion

12
Trading in Manure Production Rights
  • 1987 93
  • transfer of manure production rights restricted
    to land transfers
  • Part of transfers of whole farm
  • With marriage and heritage
  • With annulment of lease contract
  • Expansion only by buying land
  • However, If buying additional land the associated
    reference amount would first fill the gap on
    existing land.
  • Expansion of animal production therefore limited
    to new farms on cropping land

13
199497 Relaxed trading
  • These restrictions limited investment
  • Manure production right renamed manure quotas 1)
    land based and 2) non-land based quotas
  • 1) 125 kg of phosphate per ha of land
  • 2) diff. between land based quota and the animal
    based reference amount
  • Both 1 and 2 made animal specific
  • Only non-land based quotas were tradable

14
199497 Relaxed trading
  • Reference amount adjusted for improvement in feed
    quality
  • The difference between reference amount and
    adjusted reference amount made non-tradable
  • Quota cut by 25 when traded
  • Could only trade from animal category 3) to 2) to
    1), not in reverse order restrict expansion in
    swine production

15
Trading in Manure Production Rights
16
1995 Nutrient Accounting System proposed
  • In 1995 quotas for pork and poultry cut by 30 in
    response to the development of low-nutrient feed,
  • 1997 further problems with swine fewer, policy
    move to reduce swine quotas by further 25 by
    2000 - farmer protest
  • 1 Jan 1998 NAS and building regulation introduced
    and the 30 abandoned
  • 1 Sept 1998 pork quotas reduced to reflect 90 of
    herd as part of the aim to reduce herd by 25 by
    2000
  • Quota buy-out program for the swine sector

17
1998 Nutrient Accounting System
  • Farmers challenged 10 reduction in court. In
    2000 the Court upheld decision but exempted the
    planned 15 reduction in 2000
  • Nutrient accounting for phosphor and nitrate
  • Nutrient surplus subject to a high tax to
    encourage farmers in surplus regions to truck
    manure and spread it on grain farms in deficit
    region
  • Building requirements for new buildings to reduce
    ammonia emissions
  • Condition for purchase of extra quota
    improvement for buildings to reduce ammonia
    emission

18
Regional Differences and Geographical
Restrictions on Trading
  • Surplus manure production in excess of 125 kg of
    P2O5/ha
  • Deficit less than 125 kg
  • Surplus region small intensive farms
  • Deficit region larger farms with little
    experience in confined livestock production
  • Trade allowed within regions
  • And from surplus to deficit
  • In surplus regions expansion also required
    purchase of ammonium rights these only tradable
    within counties
  • Reduce willingness to expand in surplus regions

19
Evaluation
  • Price of quota Great variation between regions,
    animal categories and over time
  • Volume of trade
  • very low 1.5 of total quota the first year
  • By 1997 accumulated to 8.1 and 9.5 for surplus
    and deficit regions respectively

20
Evaluation
  • Reasons for low trade
  • Administrative procedures buyers had to
    demonstrate adequate manure disposal plan. During
    first year 37 of plans rejected. Therefore high
    transaction costs (as much as 17 of price)
  • Policy uncertainty
  • Initially many had excess quotas (10-25, gave
    high numbers for reference amount calculations).
    Impact on demand and price
  • Restrictions between regions and categories
    impeded trade
  • The 25 retirement rule increased the willingness
    to accept

21
Evaluation
  • Geographic pattern of trade
  • Encouraged farmers in surplus region to sell land
    and quota and set up in deficit region
  • Encouraged exit adjustment
  • Environmental effectiveness
  • Animal numbers and nutrients emission have been
    reduced but why and by how much?
  • Especially pork farmers have not been convinced
    of the environmental benefits
  • Dynamic Effects and Innovation
  • Incentive to development of methods to reduce
    emission. Especially nutritional development in
    the pork industry

22
Post-industrial approaches
  • Less input intensive farming methods
  • Focus on value and quality
  • Civic agriculture
  • Organic farming
  • Alternative agriculture
  • Biodynamic farming
  • Ecologically grown
  • Local food systems
  • Community supported agriculture
  • The Environmentally friendly producer and
    consumer - Eco-labeling
  • Shade grown coffee
  • Plantation timber
  • Fair Trade not Free Trade

23
Low-till or no-till
Slide from Southwestern Minnesota from
www.stolaf.edu
24
Higher Soil Organic Matter
Soil Resources
  • Nutrients for crop growth
  • Soil aggregation and porosity
  • Stabilizes soil against erosion

Slide from Southwestern Minnesota from
www.stolaf.edu
25
Lower Soil Compaction
Soil Resources
  • Enhances water infiltration
  • Prevents rapid runoff and soil erosion

Slide from Southwestern Minnesota from
www.stolaf.edu
26
Higher Soil Moisture
Soil Resources
  • (samples taken during grain-filling period
    Aug./Sept.)

Slide from Southwestern Minnesota from
www.stolaf.edu
27
Higher Soil Invertebrate Populations
Soil Resources
  • Contribute to Nutrient Recycling
  • Maintain porous soil (burrowing)
  • Control crop pests

Slide from Southwestern Minnesota from
www.stolaf.edu
28
Lower Runoff Volume
Water Resources
  • Porous soil structures
  • Cover crops (crop rotation)
  • Crop residue (no till)


increase infiltration
Slide from Southwestern Minnesota from
www.stolaf.edu
29
Lower N Loss in Runoff
Water Resources
  • Crop Rotation deep roots of perennials take up
    nutrients
  • No Till low erosion prevents nutrient loss

30
Lower Fossil Fuel Use
Energy Use
  • Decreased fertilizer and pesticide use
  • Decreased machinery and fuel use

31
Higher Corn and Soybean Yields
Economic Productivity
  • Higher soil fertility
  • Higher soil moisture

32
Environmentally friendly production
Shade grown coffee
33
Environmentally friendly production
  • Plantations - the alternative to native forest
    logging sustainable production seal of
    approval

Forest clearing project sponsored by the
Indonesian government.
34
Fair trade not free trade FairTrade Mark
Banana from Haiti
an independent guarantee that disadvantaged
producers in the developing world are getting a
better deal
35
Civic Agriculture
  • Smaller scale, locally oriented enterprises
  • Direct marketing offers farmers the advantage of
  • High value products organic grown, specialties
  • grass fed
  • free range
  • Cut out of middle-level handlers
  • pick-your-own, farm
    stands
  • growers marked, e-mail
    orders, consumer participation in production
  • Craft-style products
  • Better land management practices
  • Healthier soils and animals
  • A community connection about food production

36
Trends in Direct sales
  • 1992 - 86.000 farmers in US mainland reported
    direct sales
  • 1997 97.000 farmers in US mainland reported
    direct sales
  • 5 of all farms with sales totaling US 500
    million, but less than 1 of all agricultural
    sales

37
Demographic characteristics
  • Farmers in areas in and around metropolitan areas
    can benefit
  • Farmers in areas with a population of affluent,
    well-educated urban consumers
  • 13 of all farms in Northeast
  • 3.1 of all farms in the South
  • 4 of all farms in the Midwest

38
Water in Australia-
  • another example

39
Historical context
  • Policy legacy resulted in over allocation of
    water and development of unsustainable land
  • Mechanisms needed to
  • facilitate and encourage a reallocation of
    resources to more efficient and higher valued
    producers in more sustainable locations
  • provide water for ecosystems

40
Council of Australian Governments
  • Following international trends in 1994 CoAG
    introduced a reform package
  • Pricing
  • Water entitlements
  • Water Trading
  • Formally recognizing the environment
  • Institutional reforms
  • Consultation and public education
  • Part of an IGA on a National Competition
  • Policy and related reforms

41
Council of Australian Governments
  • 2003 review identified three shortcomings
  • uncertainty over the long-term access to water
    was still hampering investment
  • Current water market arrangements are preventing
    markets from reaching their full potential
  • concern over the pace of securing adequate
    environmental flows and adaptive management
    systems.

42
2004 National Water Initiative
  • Clear, secure and nationally-compatible
    characteristics for water access entitlements
    defined as a perpetual share of the consumptive
    pool
  • a transparent, statutory-based water planning
    process defining the consumptive pool and the
    process of allocating water
  • statutory provisions for environmental and other
    public benefit outcomes

43
2004 National Water Initiative
  • returning currently over allocated or overused
    systems to environmentally sustainable levels of
    extraction
  • progressive removal of barriers to trade in water
  • assignment of risk arising from future change in
    the availability of water for consumption
  • address future adjustment issues that may impact
    on water users and communities

44
The Murray Darling Basin
  • 1996 Cap on water use at 93/94 level
  • 2002 Living Murray process
  • 2004 IGA on addressing overallocation as the
    first step to provide 500 GL for six sites
  • Water Sharing Plans NWI no guidelines as to how
    to share the cost of this

45
State legislation and policy
  • South Australia 1997, NSW 2000, Queensland 2000
    New Water Acts
  • Separation of land and water
  • Separation of ownership and use of water
  • Planning processes
  • Water markets
  • Environmental issues
  • But absolutely inconsistent across states

46
State legislation and policy
  • 2004 - Victoria White Paper
  • Introduce the separation of land and water max
    10 of total entitlements of source
  • Share based entitlement
  • Non-tradable site use licenses linked to land
  • Some channels need to be closed compensation
    for loss of land value
  • New tradable low security license against 20
    reduction in pool for the environment

47
State legislation and policy
  • Victorian White Paper continued
  • Channel capacity entitlement
  • Separate capacity charge better economic
    signals
  • Government committed to provide the initial water
    for environmental flow
  • Promise to consider supporting communities
    suffering from export of water out of districts

48
State legislation and policy
  • Generally changed allocation practice
  • Transferred most risk management from water
    authorities to irrigators
  • Water markets looked upon as one of the main
    instruments to alleviate impact of new policy
    paradigm by both Federal, State and Basin

49
Have markets achieved objectives
  • Water moved to more efficient users
  • Water moved to higher valued users
  • Water consolidate into larger units

50
Conclusions
  • Change in policy paradigm in Australia aggressive
    due to the extend of the impact of past policies
  • Transferred most risk management to irrigators
  • Reductions in entitlement inevitable in most
    catchments
  • Water markets relied upon to manage this process

51
A sustainable Water Management Framework
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