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Monday, November 25, 2024

Momentum builds for agroecology as alternative US farming method

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Santa J. Ono, Ph.D. President at University of Michigan - Ann Arbor | Official website

Santa J. Ono, Ph.D. President at University of Michigan - Ann Arbor | Official website

Agroecology is gaining momentum as a way to improve healthy food access and affordability, according to a University of Michigan researcher. Grounded in the principles of sustainability, resilience, and fairness, agroecology represents a shift toward a more integrated and ecological approach to agriculture.

Ivette Perfecto, U-M professor of environment and sustainability, says agroecology enjoys growing cross-sector support, but there is an urgent need for coordinated action to advance sustainable farming while also addressing challenges related to diversity and structural barriers. “It is important that we recognize that this has to be a pluralistic movement that incorporates a lot of different people’s perspectives—in particular, those marginalized in the past (Indigenous people and people of color) that are playing a really important role in this agroecological movement,” she said.

The detrimental impact of current U.S. policies, Perfecto says, extends beyond national borders, shaping agricultural practices and trade on an international scale. Among these is the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), which has positioned the dominant industrial agriculture regime at the center, negatively affecting sustainable smallholder farming in other countries, especially Mexico.

NAFTA has facilitated the influx of inexpensive, subsidized U.S. agricultural products into Mexican markets, undermining the viability of local farming operations that cannot compete on price. This not only threatens the livelihood of Mexican small-scale farmers but also destabilizes regional agricultural traditions and food sovereignty, Perfecto says.

For decades, there has been recognition within the United States of the detrimental impacts associated with industrial agriculture. These include exploitative practices and a significant ecological footprint. Despite reports from the National Research Council calling for a shift away from unsustainable methods as early as 1989, progress toward change has been sluggish.

According to Perfecto, our current food system predominantly consists of industrial agricultural practices that have destructive impacts on Earth’s environment by contributing significantly to climate change, reducing biodiversity and undermining food security. “This highly industrialized agriculture is characterized by monocultures, reduced genetic diversity growing dependence on chemical and pharmaceutical technologies," she said. "In the U.S., as in the rest of the world," she continued "this system has high externalized costs to the environment and human health."

“The hidden costs of a global food system that relies on industrial agriculture are estimated to be $12.7 trillion,” she added “with the vast majority driven by public health crises due to unhealthy foods that disproportionately burden low-income people.”

Advocates argue that for significant headway to be made agroecology must be acknowledged and validated by established mainstream entities ranging from academic institutions to legislative bodies.

“Moving forward coordination across diverse actors may serve foster plural visions agroecology with grounding support institutions power multiple aligned social movements change ultimately bridging activism science practice advance agroecology US” Perfecto said.

Contributing authors include Theresa Ong of Dartmouth College Antonio Roman-Alcalá California State University Estelí Jiménez-Soto University South Florida Erin Jackson Colorado State University Hannah Duff Montana State University

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