I have just submitted the following letter to RSC News, which is published by the Royal Society of Chemistry.
Sir:
The quality of soil cannot be over-emphasised, as was alluded to in the
September issue of RSC News, and indeed pointed-out in 1937 by the then
U.S. president, Franklin D. Roosevelt, in a letter to State Governors
saying that: “The nation that destroys its soil destroys itself," urging
uniform soil conservation laws. Roosavelt was aware too of the
importance of phosphorus in soil, though the agriculture in the U.S. was
far less dependent on rock phosphate as a fertilizer, and indeed the
rest of the world, than is the case now. According to some estimates,
the production of rock phosphate will peak around the year 2030, with
potentially catastrophic consequences for world food production in the
subsequent years. A wholesale conservation of phosphorus is necessary,
including from human and animal waste, to allay this situation, and
methods of regenerative agriculture and permaculture should be
researched and developed which both reduce inputs of synthetic and mined
fertilizers, and rebuild the organic component of soil, including its
mycorrhizal fungi, which act symbiotically with the roots of plants, and
provide nutrients (including phosphate) to the plants in exchange for
carbohydrate delivered from the plant as formed by photosynthesis. As a
rider to this, the excessive application of phosphate fertilizer
discourages the growth of the fungi, and renders agriculture yet further
dependent on artificial inputs of phosphorus, in a pseudo-addictive
fashion. It has been stated that, if done over the world's 15 million
square kilometers of arable land, some 40% of anthropogenic carbon
emissions might be sequestered in soil through the implementation of
regenerative practices.
Regards,
Chris Rhodes
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