Title: Increasing Yields: The Green Revolution
1Increasing YieldsThe Green Revolution
Sources
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2(No Transcript)
3How many hungry people?
Thats 1 in 8 people worldwide
Does the world produce enough food now? 2,700
calories per person.
How much of the food produced in the world goes
to waste? (mostly by rotting or being eaten by
vermin in poor countries, thrown away in rich
countries)
4Yields have increased
- British wheat yields tripled in last 50 years
- 15X increase from 500 years ago
- Cereal yield worldwide doubled since 1960s
5Reasons Yields Increase
- Increased inputs
- Labor
- Fertilizer
- Machinery
- increased output
- Using technology
- without increasing inputs
- Increased efficiency
6Production Function
- Initially, as input increases, output increases
- Eventually, a point of maximum efficiency will be
reached - Diminishing returns more input leads to smaller
and smaller gains - i.e. marginal costs increase
7Inputs
- Fertilizer
- Can improve yields dramatically 20-1000
- Diminished response if keep adding
- Reduces growth at high levels
- Effectiveness depends on
- Water/Irrigation
- Timing of application
- Biggest increase will be in Africa
- Dem. Rep. Congo uses 1 fertilizer used in South
Africa
Cassava in Gambia
8Inputs
- Animal Traction
- 400 million draft animals in world
- ½ Worlds ag land farmed with draft animals
- ¼ farmed with hand tools
- ¼ mechanized
China
9Use of Draft Animals
- Do the work of 3-4 humans
- Increase land able to be farmed
- Animal plowing breaks soil better than by hand
- Source of fertilizer
- Initial cost high
- Profitable if can expand land
Vietnam
10Tractors
- Poorest farmers will consider moving from hand
tools to animals - Farmers using animals will consider using
machinery - May not be efficient choice
- Credit limited
- Gas expensive
- Maintenance expensive
- But labor cheap
Zimbabwe
11Big Growers More Efficient?
- Are big growers more efficient?
- have the know-how to produce
- Would redistribution of land (i.e. breaking up
big farms) lower production? - hurt the hungry?
Brazil Farm
12Big growers NOT always more efficient
- Sometimes Big Growers are less efficient than
small growers in yield/acre - Often land left idle by large landowners (89 in
Brazil) - Big operations are fossil fuel intensive
requiring 10 Calories for every one produced
small growers use fewer calories to produce one.
13Small farmers often more efficient
- Small farmers use labor more intensively
- Small farmers use space more efficiently
- Small landowners more motivated for production
and conservation
Tanzania
14Big Growers
- Advantages of wealth and size
- Big farms can more easily survive
- Large operations with absentee owners (investors)
tend to - Overuse the soil
- Over-spray with chemicals
- Remove wealth generated from the community
15Land Reform
- World Bank productivity would be increased if
land distribution more equitable - Land reform (redistribution) successful after
WWII - South Korea,
- Taiwan
- China
- Recent success
- Japan
- Zimbabwe
- Kerala, India
Kerala, India
16The Green Revolution
- WHY?
- Emerged out of a concern over population growth
- Could agricultural production keep pace?
- WHAT?
- The transformation of agriculture in many
developing countries that led to significant
increases in cereal production between the 1940s
and 1970s. - Widespread introduction of science and technology
in agriculture
17Green Revolution
- Started in Mexico, late 40s
- By 1960s improved wheat varieties gave dramatic
increase in yield in Mexico - Mexico food importer to food exporter
- Varieties more responsive to irrigation and
petrochemical fertilizers - Soon new rice and maize varieties
18Recipe for a Revolution
- High Yielding Varieties (HYV) seeds
- Increased nitrogen absorption potential
- Semi-dwarf varieties
- By 1970
- 20 of wheat area and 30 of rice area in
developing countries planted with HYV
19Recipe for a Revolution
- Required application of
- Nitrogen Fertilizers
- Synthetic Pesticides
- Irrigation
- F1 Hybrids
- Double-Cropping farmland
- Continued Expansion of Green Revolution crops
- As farmers got increased yields from rice and
wheat, they planted more land in rice and wheat
at the expense of other crops - Effect on biodiversity?
20Norman Borlaug
- Joined Rockefeller Foundation team in Mexico 1944
- Increased yield, rust resistance in wheat
- Biggest contributor to Green Revolution
- Won Nobel Peace Prize in 1970
21Green Revolution
- 1970s spread to millions of third world farmers
- 1990s 40 of all farms in third world planted
HYV - 75 Rice in Asia
- 80 Wheat in third world
- 70 Corn worldwide
- Improved standard of living for millions people
worldwide
22CIMMYT
- CIMMYT
- International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center
- In Mexico
- Part of CGIAR
- Consultative Group on International Agricultural
Research
23Social impacts
- Farmers had larger incomes
- Stimulated the non-farm economy
- Improved rural (farmers and others) nutrition
because they had more to spend - Slowed down conversion of land to agriculture
- But favored large, mechanized farms over small,
family farms
24Criticisms of the Green Revolution
- Green Revolution hasnt alleviated hunger
- Economic power, land controlled by few
- Technology benefits wealthy
- Therefore Green Revolution increases inequity
- More hunger AND more food at same time
25Criticisms of the Green Revolution
- Food Insecurity of poor not addressed
- Cash Crops food flows from the poor and hungry
nations to the rich and well-fed nations - Green Revolution not sustainable
- destroys resource base on which agriculture
depends
26Example India
- Self-sufficient in grain due to Green Revolution
- But 1/3 of people poor
- 5,000 children die each day
- Poor cannot afford to BUY the food
India
27Criticisms of the Green Revolution
- Early, poor had little access to credit
- Could not buy seeds, fertilizer, irrigation to
make Green Revolution work - Wealthy invested, got richer, drove out poor
- Now, more emphasis on loans for poor
28There are still problems
- Need good land (wealthy own)
- Agrochemicals bad for health, environment
- Expensive inputs profits to global chemical
companies - Rural people displaced from land
- Mechanization reduces agricultural jobs
- Not ecologically sustainable depletes soil,
pesticide race
29Green revolution in India
30Green revolution problems
- Requires heavy doses of fertilizer, irrigation,
equipment - Fossil fuel use increase
- Emphasizes rice, wheat (commodity crops) not
subsistence crops
31Philippines Example
- Two villages studied
- large and small farmers invested in Green
Revolution - Village 1 had more equal land holdings,
solidarity - All benefited from Green Revolution
- Village 2 dominated by a few wealthy landowners.
- Wealthy increased land by 50 at expense of poor
32Farm Squeeze
- Fertilizer use increases by huge amount
- Yields do not increase proportionally
- India 6x rise in fertilizer use but 2/3 less
production/ton fertilizer - Need more fertilizer, pesticide each year for
same result - Thus cost go up faster than yields cost-price
squeeze
33Farm Squeeze
- U.S. true home of Green Revolution
- Yields up 3x
- but prices down
- To survive, must expand acreage
- to make up for lower per acre profit.
34U.S. Farm Squeeze
- Since WWII
- number of farms decreased 2/3
- average farm size up ½
- rural communities gutted
- production costs up from 50 of gross to 80
35Soil Depletion Worldwide
- Dramatic increases in yields during 1970s, 1980s
- Soil now depleted, resulting in leveling off or
dropping yields - 6 of Ag land in India now useless
36Rice
- Rice breeding at International Rice Research
Institute IRRI
37Rice Problem
- 1968 IR8 rice had 2x yield increase
- Short
- need herbicides to compete with weeds
- Uniform genetically
- susceptible to pests
- Brown plant hopper devastated rice
- Insecticide spraying useless
- brown hopper resistant
38Rice Problem
- 1973 IR26 Resistant to brown plant hopper
- Worked 2 years
- Then Biotype 2 of plant hoppers attacked
39Rice Problem
- 1975 IR32 Resistant to Biotype 2
- Now Biotype 3 appeared
- Insecticides again useless
- Insecticides killed off brown hopper predators
- Resulted in 40x increase in hoppers
40Profits
- Profits from Green Revolution go to
- Middlemen
- Banks
- Chemical companies
- Biggest growers
- Grain prices fall
- Farms get bigger
Brazil
41Increased Dependency
- Poor countries must import
- Seeds
- Fertilizer
- Pesticides
- Herbicides
- Cost to India increased 600 1960-1980
- Biotechnology leads to more dependency
42Unsustainable Agriculture
- Industrial agriculture
- mining land to extract maximum output
- War between humans and weeds, insects and
disease - Market dictates weapons
- pesticides and chemical fertilizers
- We are destroying our food- producing resources
43Destruction of Ag Resources
- Desertification
- Soil erosion
- Pesticide contamination
- Groundwater depletion
- Salinization
- Urban sprawl
- Genetic resources shrinking
- Fossil fuels depleting
44Sustainable Agriculture Goals
- Environmental Health
- Economic Profitability
- Social and Economic Equity
45Agroecology
- Sustainable farming based on
- ecological principles
- Diversity
- Interdependence
- Synergy
- Complex interactions
- Science to improve not displace traditional
farming - Low energy, capital costs
46Agroecology
- Intercropping
- Mixing annual and perennial crops
- Crop rotations
- Rotate cereals and legumes
- Mixing of plant and animal production
- Rice paddies with edible weeds, fish and rice
- Not continuous production of one crop
47Africa
- Fragile soils must be protected
- Could mix millet, cattle, and Acacia trees
- Trees fix nitrogen, have deep tap roots
- Cattle eat tree pods
- Plant millet after leaves fall
- Could support 2x population in Senegal
- Aid agencies instead promoting new seeds,
fertilizers, agrochemicals, biotechnology, free
trade
48 Evergreen Revolution
- Swaminathan led Green Revolution in India
- Agrees cannot maintain crop yields
- Problems
- Excessive use of pesticides
- Groundwater depletion
- Pollution
- Monoculture
- Therefore, India needs sustainable agriculture
- Evergreen Revolution
M.S. Swaminathan World Food Prize 1987
49Vandana Shiva
- "Ecological problems arise from applying the
engineering paradigm to life." -
http//myhero.com/myhero/hero.asp?heroShiva
50Critic of the Green Revolution in India
- The Green Revolution has been a failure.
- It has led to reduced genetic diversity,
- increased vulnerability to pests,
- soil erosion,
- water shortages,
- reduced soil fertility,
- micronutrient deficiencies,
- soil contamination
Vandana Shiva
51Critic of the Green Revolution in India
- reduced availability of nutritious food crops
for the local population, - the displacement of vast numbers of small farmers
form their land, - rural impoverishment and
- increased tensions and conflicts.
Vandana Shiva
52Critic of the Green Revolution in India
- The beneficiaries have been
- the agrochemical industry,
- large petrochemical companies,
- manufacturers of agricultural machinery,
- dam builders and
- large landowners.
-
-- Vandana Shiva "The Violence of the Green
Revolution Ecological Degradation and Political
Conflict in Punjab." The Ecologist, 1991,
21(2)57-60
53Genetic EngineeringThe Next Green Revolution ?
http//www.businessweek.com/1999/99_15/b3624011.ht
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54Next Green Revolution?
- Biotechnology will help developing countries
accomplish things that they could never do with
conventional plant breeding - I believe genetically modified food crops will
stop world hunger.
Norman Borlaug Nobel Peace Prize
55The Next Green Revolution?
- Biotechnology helps farmers produce higher yields
on less land. - Technology allows us to have less impact on soil
erosion, biodiversity, wildlife, forests, and
grasslands - To achieve comparable yields (1950-1999) with old
farming methods, would have needed an additional
1.8 Billion hectares of land
Norman Borlaug Nobel Peace Prize
56Biotechnology Critic
- Biotechnology development
- Same vision as chemical industry
- Short term goals
- Enhanced yields, profit margins
- Nature should be dominated and exploited
- forced to yield more
- Prefer quick solutions
- to complex ecological problems
- Reductionist thinking about farming
- Instead of integrated systems
- Agricultural success means
- Short term profits
- Not long term sustainability
-
-- Jane Rissler, Union of Concerned Scientists
57Fertilizer use
- Steady increase from 1950s.
- Why erratic beginning 1980s?
58Land planted in crops
- Net Result Drop of per capita acreage - that is
land planted per person - this decrease is due to
an increasing population which by itself would
lead to a decreased per capita if land were not
added proportionally, and the additional decrease
due to land withdrawal... - 1950 .24 acres/person
- 1986 .1 5 acres/person
- 2000 .1 2 acres/person
59CAFOs
- Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations
60 61CAFO
- Chickens with little room to run around in a
darkened warehouse - Diseases spread easily, so chicken farmers use
lots of ______________
62Biotechnology
- Introducing genes from one organism to a crop
plant or animal. - Herbicide resistance
- Pesticide resistance
63Terminator technology
- Genes added to crops that make the seeds
infertile - Therefore, farmers cant save seeds from their
harvest for planting the next season - This is typically done in poor countries
- Problems
- Farmer must buy seeds every year.
- If terminator escaped, wild plants could be made
infertile. - The first problem is real the second problem is
mostly hype?plants are infertile, so low fitness
64