Energy Intensive v Bio-intensive Farming

in response to the Royal Society call for better assurance of biofuel sustainability GCC commentator Henrik criticized energy intensive farming practices.

Making Ethanol cartoon
The cartoon gives a good illustration of energy inputs for corn to ethanol, and why its EROEI (Energy Return On Energy Invested) is so poor. It also suggests two other considerations: the cost of the fuel and the pollution associated with production from field to wheel. Perhaps, if the person listening had appeared to represent third world countries, it also then would suggest the consideration of equity.

Erica Barnett has written a post in World Changing, entitled “Making More Food with Less”, which is about organic / sustainable gardening. Not the same as farming, true, although the term applied to larger scale operations is permaculture. Some of the principles still are applicable; growing food is growing food.

Note: Having faced the challenge of an energy crisis that few other countries have yet to see, Cuba is a good example of the application of such practices. Read more about how and why the Cubans made this happen at “The Power of Community“.

The post is partially a book review. Gardening guru and soil expert John Jeavons is author of the book “How to Grow More Vegetables Than You Ever Thought Possible On Less Land Than You Can Imagine,” “Jeavons has spent the last 30 years touting small-scale, sustainable, organic farming–a method of closed-loop crop production he has dubbed ‘biointensive farming‘.” Something similar I had learned to call the French Intensive method. A major heading would be “sustainable agriculture“.

biointensive farming
“It takes about 15,000 to 30,000 square feet of land to feed one person the average U.S. diet,” says Jeavons. “I’ve figured out how to get it down to 4,000 square feet. How? I focus on growing soil, not crops.”

That’s talking to the San Francisco Chronicle a few years back (via Grist).

Basically, biointensive farming incorporates many of the same practices as biodynamics, and takes them a few steps further. In addition to double-digging (tilling beds to a depth of 24 inches for greater aeration), planting in space-saving hexagonal or triangular patterns, planting complementary crops in the same space, and composting, farmers or gardeners employing biointensive methods use higher-energy crops (such as root crops) to increase the amount of calories a small piece of land will produce, grow some crops for use exclusively as compost (such as rye and alfalfa), and practice strict crop rotation to preserve soil productivity, among other things.

Some of biointensive farming’s practices strike me as impractical on both a small and a large scale–human-waste composting is never going to become all that popular, for example, and I can’t see many people doing the kind of intensive calories-per-square-inch calculations Jeavons calls for. Still, the method has some major advantages over conventional farming–the largest and most obvious being, of course, that it allows farmers to produce far more food per acre. That’s a huge boon for home gardeners, like me, with little farmable land but a strong desire to get off the factory food grid. And it has exciting implications for subsistence farmers in places where arable land is scarce and growing scarcer–places like Kenya, Mexico, and Argentina, where Jeavons’ methods are being used by thousands of small-scale farmers.

Stretching the productivity of a small amount of space is one way to increase harvests. Stretching out the growing season is another. According to a recent article in the New York Times, “extreme season extension” is growing in popularity as demand for local food increases. Using unheated low metal hoop houses and double-row covers, some farmers in the northern United States have managed to extend the season for certain produce through the spring, making crops like spinach and herbs available locally year-round. Hoop houses, it turns out, are cheaper than greenhouses; doubly so since, as temporary structures, they aren’t subject to property taxes. Another season extension technology is called a high tunnel, which can be large enough to accommodate a tractor. With the popularity of both methods increasing, we may soon see local, organic strawberries on store shelves–in January.

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4 Comments

  1. jcwinnie
    Posted 2008-1-25 at 4:53 pm | Permalink

    Support Local Farmers Markets
    The mission of the Center for Agroecology & Sustainable Food Systems at the University of California, Santa Cruz is “to research, develop and advance sustainable food and agricultural systems that are environmentally sound, economically viable, socially responsible, nonexploitative, and that serve as a foundation for future generations.”

    Sustainable Agriculture Links

  2. jcwinnie
    Posted 2008-1-26 at 1:34 pm | Permalink

    The New York Times reports that the Gates Foundation has made a committment to give $306 million to assist poor farmers. Celia W. Dugger states that the grants are aimed at providing the rural poor “with better seeds, healthier soil and access to new markets for their crops.”

  3. jcwinnie
    Posted 2008-3-15 at 11:34 am | Permalink

    TOD graph energy flow of US food system

  4. jcwinnie
    Posted 2008-3-18 at 10:32 am | Permalink

    The short video above is a teaser from Richard Heinberg’s presentation last year to the UK’s Soil Association. If you’re interested in reading or hearing all of his talk , you can do that here: http://www.soilassociation.org/ladyevelecture

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