Energy Efficiency

climate change, energy resources and the big picture: an Australian perspective on global issues

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Eating Topsoil to Extinction

February 5th, 2010 · 2 Comments

Several years ago we heard about the plight of koalas – moved to an island to make way for a housing estate in Victoria years before – and the ‘humane culling of same, as they had pro-created more than the surrounding gum trees could feed, leading to starvation.

You would have thought any government with half a brain would have dedicded that if koalas – that have a minimal foot-print – can lay waste of their environment, that so too could humans on the mainland.

Of course we’re a lot ‘smarter’, because we can drive to another region, use fertilizers and broad acres farming and if that doesn’t work, sell of some of our resources (which will also eventually run out, but hey, that’s someone elses problem) and buy food in from overseas (which we now do to the order of about 27% in fruit and veg).

But really, should the total focus just be just on water or the almost depleted phosphates used world-wide for broadacre farming … what about topsoil ?

Topsoil is pretty much the cream of the soil, the culmination of various micro-organisms working together to break down wastes to prepare a vegetation nirvana; depending on nutrients, acidity and PH balances, a wide selection of crops can be grown directly and indirectly (bovines etc) for human consumption, but what happens when the micro-organisms – which work to a fairly exacting standard – can’t get access with enough raw materials to make more topsoil ?  Iowa is the leading ethanol producer in the USA and they calculated that roughly every 4 litres of ethanol (they produce) translates into a loss of  8 kilos of topsoil.

 

We read of the extenction of species all around the world; we know that in China, millions of farming families have been moved from productive soils to make way for factory’s, cities and the world’s largest dams; we knw the UN has reported that biofuel production now sees man pushed aside for the wealthy to drive, so is there anyone out there not affected ?

 

A recent article in the UK projects that Britain will face a food crisis as the world’s topsoil vanishes in 60 years and the understatement of the century …leading to a catastrophic food crisis and drastically higher prices for consumers !  Just last year,  Sydney was blanketed by thousands of tonnes of soil during its worst dust storm in 70 years; a couple of years earlier it was Melbourne and back in the 70′s Adelaide was covered in a blanket of redsoil.

 

So how did we get to such a state of affairs, of chronic soil mismanagement and over farming causing erosion; is it possible we ave tipped the balance and this too contributes to climate change; ot is it just that we humans have pro-created to such a level that the micro-organisms can no longer keep up and there will not be enough topsoil. Scientists estimate some 75 billion tonnes of soil is lost annually with more than 80 per cent of the world’s farming land “moderately or severely eroded”.

 

A University of Sydney study found soil is being lost in China 57 times faster than it can be replaced through natural processes; in Europe the figure is 17 times, in America 10 times while 5 times as much soil is being lost in Australia, but we never had the ‘reserves’ of topsoil of the other countries. Increased land pressures aimed at compensating global production losses would likely mean it top soil will run out faster. Britain imports about 40% of all the food it consumes, a figure that has steadily risen over the past few years and yet Britian has long been acknowledged as having good reserves of top soil and corresponsing rainfall.

 

John Crawford (Professor of Sustainable Agriculture at the University of Sydney), said it was ‘unknown how long soil will last; it could be as little as 60 years and that is a scary figure because it is not obvious that we have time to reverse decline and still meet future demands for food; it is not an exaggeration to say that soil is the most precious resource we have got, and… (we) are not up to the task of securing it for our children never mind our grand children’.

 

But how do we rest soil and help it take in more carbon; how can we help soil to be more fertile; while organic farming and permaculture could be part of the answer, how do we feed the current population of some 6.8 billion people ? World stock of cereals dropped to a 30-year low, with demand for wheat and rice outstripping supply for the past 6 of the last 7 years. Demand always results in prices rocketing, which has already sparked civil unrest in many countries.

 

So think next time before you throw vegetable wastes in the garbage bin; use that and lawn clippings and even some discarded newspaper to make into compost and eventually did into the soil; if a few do it, its small, if 6 billion people do it, it will help, but here in Australia we are eating our topsoil quicker than it can be prepared; we need to send our body wastes back the the land from whence they came to bring back the balance …  it starts with you.

Tags: agriculture · environment

2 responses so far ↓

  • 1 Jordan // Sep 12, 2010 at 9:49 am

    This is a very important issue, but most people have no idea about the decline in topsoil. Thank you for getting the message out there

  • 2 Topsoil // Dec 24, 2011 at 2:50 pm

    This is really an important matter to discuss people are unaware of this and your writing really help them. .

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