Why The World Is Running Out Of Soil

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  • Опубліковано 18 тра 2024
  • Critical topsoil is eroding at an alarming pace due to climate change and poor farming practices. The United Nations declared soil finite and predicted catastrophic loss within 60 years. The world needs soil for farming, water filtration, climate mitigation, ecosystem services, health care and more. The impact of soil degradation could total $23 trillion in losses of food, ecosystem services and income worldwide by 2050, according to the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification. According to the UN, soil erosion may reduce up to 10 per cent of crop yields by 2050. That’s like removing millions of acres of farm land.
    “There are places that have already lost all of their topsoil,” Jo Handelsman, author of “A World Without Soil,” and a professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, told CNBC.
    “We have identified 10 soil threats in our global report … Soil erosion is number one because it’s taking place everywhere,” Ronald Vargas, the secretary of the Global Soil Partnership and Land and Water Officer at the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, told CNBC.
    According to the U.N., soil erosion may reduce up to 10% of crop yields by 2050, which is the equivalent of removing millions of acres of farmland.
    And when the world loses soil, food supply, clean drinking water and biodiversity are threatened.
    What’s more, soil plays an important role in mitigating climate change.
    Soil contains more than three times the amount of carbon in the earth’s atmosphere and four times as much in all living plants and animals combined, according to the Columbia Climate School.
    “Soil is the habitat for over a quarter of the planet’s biodiversity. Each gram of soil contains millions of cells of bacteria and fungi that play a very important role in all ecosystem services,” Reza Afshar, chief scientist at the regenerative agriculture research farm at the Rodale Institute, told CNBC.
    The Rodale Institute in Kutztown, Pennsylvania, is known as the birthplace of modern organic agriculture.
    “The projects we do here are centered around improving and rebuilding soil health. We have a farming system trial that’s been running for 42 years,” Afshar said. It is the longest-running side-by-side comparison of organic and conventional grain cropping systems in North America.
    The research has found regenerative, organic agriculture produces yields up to 40% higher during droughts, can earn farmers greater profits and releases 40% fewer carbon emissions than conventional agricultural practices.
    How’s that possible? The Rodale Institute says it all starts with the soil.
    “When we talk about healthy soil, we are talking about all aspects of the soil, chemical, physical and biological that should be in a perfect status to be able to produce healthy food for us,” Afshar said.
    It’s critical, of course, because the world relies on soil for 95% of our food production. But that’s just the beginning of its importance.
    “The good news is that we know enough to get to work,” Dianna Bagnall, a research soil scientist at the Soil Health Institute, told CNBC.
    Watch the video above to learn more about why we’re facing a silent soil crisis, how soil can be saved and what that means for the world.
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    Why The World Is Running Out Of Soil

КОМЕНТАРІ • 2,1 тис.

  • @VarsVerum
    @VarsVerum Рік тому +898

    Seems like we’re just running out of everything… 😔

    • @WiCapitalco
      @WiCapitalco Рік тому

      We aren't. It's all by design. Don't listen to these college educated idiots. They don't know what they're talking about 99% of the time. It's all theory.

    • @aaronbrutus2654
      @aaronbrutus2654 Рік тому +54

      They're f****** with you bro

    • @heritageimaging7768
      @heritageimaging7768 Рік тому +68

      @@aaronbrutus2654 Except rampant unchecked over-population.

    • @Hans-gb4mv
      @Hans-gb4mv Рік тому +88

      No, we're not. For example, we are not running out of debt

    • @aaronbrutus2654
      @aaronbrutus2654 Рік тому +108

      @@heritageimaging7768 I'm a trucker, I have traveled every corner of this country. WE ARE NOT OVER POPULATED, it's nonsense!

  • @charlespaynter8987
    @charlespaynter8987 Рік тому +139

    I’m a farmer. It’s important to understand that we are all part of the same process in which we all have influence. What you want to eat, how and when you get your food etc all has powerful direct links to the production and processing of it. It’s an industrialised system that is out of balance. If we all find out about how food is produced and processed, what this means for our health, the soils and the environment, we can make decisions about our diets that can translate directly to managing soils in a way that gives better outcomes. It is actually very straightforward, it just needs us to learn some stuff and then step up to the plate.

    • @discoverFigureitout
      @discoverFigureitout Рік тому +2

      Less processed foods, more organic foods, and hopefully government starts funding mega aquaponic farms powered by solar ?

    • @robmccormick8155
      @robmccormick8155 Рік тому +10

      @@discoverFigureitout Man, screw government funding. Leave big brother out of it. The people need to start taking care of eachother without the governments "help".

    • @discoverFigureitout
      @discoverFigureitout Рік тому +4

      @@robmccormick8155 Agreed, message me for worms or soil, Colorado based. I'm referencing the fact that industrialized farming won't go away if GOVT continues to fund

    • @louisfalberts7760
      @louisfalberts7760 Рік тому

      great comment

    • @ashdav9980
      @ashdav9980 Рік тому +2

      @@discoverFigureitout Most people can make a difference without having to rely on government. Honestly, I think government and the attitude it's purpose is to "take care of me and take care of things in our society" lets humans take a lazy and non-active stance, "I don't have to do it because government will take care of it". I live in a suburban neighborhood, east coast, and for the last few years we have a few small raised garden beds, 100% organic, and are able to grow much of our own produce, especially in summer. My kids are also learning the connection of farm/growing to table. We don't eat out (can't really due to allergies) and cook everything at home. Real food, less impact, it can be done if everyone takes a little ownership in it.

  • @b_uppy
    @b_uppy Рік тому +99

    One of the way to protect soil is through multiple, continuous cover crops but some insurance companies refuse to insure farmers who do this.
    Without insurance, farmers wishing to do covercropping are also denied government funding.
    Some of these insurance companies are part of the corporate conglomerates the already get the overwhelming majority of funding for farmers...

    • @ahmadhasif979
      @ahmadhasif979 Рік тому +1

      Wow didn't know about this,, so weird

    • @b_uppy
      @b_uppy Рік тому +4

      @@ahmadhasif979
      Two excellent soil scientists with channels on UA-cam is Dr Elaine Ingham and Dr Christine Jones.
      (More bad news, they say the soil will likely only last 45 years.)

    • @FutureBoyWonder
      @FutureBoyWonder Рік тому

      Corporate feudalism
      You can thank the idiots that voted in neo-conservatives and spineless democrats that let this happen.
      Too bad we live in a "democracy" that doesn't allow other political parties that could have created a modern social framework that isn't driven on short-term profit driven growth.
      Until we change our economic-,political through revolution at this point nothing will change.
      A handful of intellectuals and like minded people will only ever be the extent of change in this inept country

    • @viatori5566
      @viatori5566 Рік тому +2

      What now? I'm a farmer and have never heard of this. I'm not sure why I couldn't get a corn or bean crop insured just because I plant winter wheat or rye after harvest.
      Also, cover crops have nothing to do with the subsidies. The government just paid me $700 to enroll in a program to track my farms expenses with cover crops.
      Can I ask where you're getting you're information?

    • @b_uppy
      @b_uppy Рік тому +2

      @@viatori5566
      You are required to have *insurance* to qualify for the subsidies. It is that some insurance companies refuse coverage if you do this.
      Reread my original statement above.

  • @CaryMercer
    @CaryMercer Рік тому +84

    Two words: regenerative agriculture.

    • @hawks9142
      @hawks9142 Рік тому +1

      Five words: Restoration Agriculture, by Mark Shepard

    • @Alex.the.humble
      @Alex.the.humble Рік тому

      Two other words, too late.

    • @CaryMercer
      @CaryMercer Рік тому +4

      @@Alex.the.humble Maybe. That is what Big Oil has been paying a lot of money to make people think for decades.

    • @JohnnyJackson746
      @JohnnyJackson746 Місяць тому

      Cutting forest is hurting habitats. And so is game hunting. Game hunting is hurting the cycle of animal kingdom.

  • @kchoi10
    @kchoi10 Рік тому +16

    I kind of wish CNBC included a few farmers in this session. After all, they do a lot of talking on behalf of farmers.

    • @interstellar618
      @interstellar618 Рік тому +2

      They dont want people who actually know what they're talking about to question their motives..

    • @catatonicbug7522
      @catatonicbug7522 Місяць тому

      Monsanto probably wouldn't let them.

  • @GX9900A
    @GX9900A Рік тому +333

    As a soils Conservationist I'm very, very glad somone in the media is finally talking about this. I'm a bit disappointed that you didn't mention the nutrients loss in the foods produced in tilled soils vs no till with cc. Or the ability to stop using fertilizer over time and still improve yeidls in no till with cc and intercrops. A bit disappointed ya didn't have Ray Archuleta on for this one as well.
    Still thank you for spreading this information to new people beyond our normal interactions!

    • @laminjallow6989
      @laminjallow6989 Рік тому +1

      would you recommed getting into agriculture? As africa as africa has 60% of all the worlds arable land.

    • @GX9900A
      @GX9900A Рік тому +7

      @@laminjallow6989 depends how much capital you have, where your going to do so, what's your goal, how much experience you have, ect. It's not something to just recommend there is way to many variables.
      All I can really say without knowing your specific situation is do your research, reach out to your local assistance, and always be learning.

    • @Tyler_Stoltz
      @Tyler_Stoltz Рік тому +8

      That is the same thing we are talking about in SaveSoil movement. Its a global initiative for saving agricultural soil worldwide. We are almost done with our 100 days Save Soil journey 🙏

    • @colbykinney5633
      @colbykinney5633 Рік тому +9

      I love Ray I've learned a bunch from him Gabe Brown, Elain Ingham , and John Kempf just to name a few. I have a small market garden and I don't think I'd be nearly as successful without their teachings.

    • @paladain55
      @paladain55 Рік тому +3

      how are farming yields with the practices without nitrogen fertilizer? Do they compare about equally? I've seen no fert/ organic in real life and the yield is usually around 5 times less.

  • @willieclark2256
    @willieclark2256 Рік тому +25

    I'm a farmer that has moved 100% to no till, my biggest barriers are that I'm at the mercy of rental equipment availability (more funding to SWCDs and NRCS offices for drills and combines would solve that) and there's no way for me to get insurance on my crops if I grow crops over dormant perennial cover crops. Regulation is too rigidly focused on conventional tillage and or the incremental steps away from it and not the ideal solutions.

    • @mochamommyATX
      @mochamommyATX Рік тому +2

      Thank you for ALL you do.

    • @charlespaynter8987
      @charlespaynter8987 Рік тому

      That’s because big ag (esp machinery, Fert, agrochemical, finance, seed, grain) aren’t invested in regenerative agricultural. They lobby government decision makers to keep the status quo so we spend the majority of our farm income with them. They don’t want us independent, utilising our own free resources better, cutting down on costs, no-tilling, cutting down on Fert, not spraying so much, growing less but more nutritious food. It’s not good business for them

    • @pakistaniraveasylum1396
      @pakistaniraveasylum1396 Рік тому +1

      It's about money
      Money will end or humanity will fail

    • @richardcowley4087
      @richardcowley4087 Рік тому

      "No till" is for cereals
      not all crops need nor can use "No till"
      No till, does not suite every soil condition
      you cannot grow Brassicas and root crops with no till very successfully
      carrots need 30 Cm of good crumb structure and that cannot be had with no till in heavy loam

    • @willieclark2256
      @willieclark2256 Рік тому

      @@richardcowley4087 seeing as cereals make up more than the lionshare of calories consumed your concern trolling isn't pertinent or interesting

  • @suchendra7444
    @suchendra7444 Рік тому +55

    This is exactly why @Sadhguru started a campaign called #SaveSoil. to inspire governments to change the long term farming policies. #SaveSoil let's make it happen

  • @stevenstart8728
    @stevenstart8728 Рік тому +324

    Subsidised agriculture is a contributing factor. If the farmer wasn't subsidised to grow certain crops they would be more inclined to get away from mono culture and introduce grazing animals. The price of farm land in subsidised country's would also be more realistic in value.
    If we can farm in Australia without subsidies in our harsh environment why do the Americans need them? Maybe because of greed at the upper levels of business and government.

    • @karld1791
      @karld1791 Рік тому +30

      That's right Australia farms with little to no subsidies. American agriculture gets a full 30% of it's income from the government in America. Corn, wheat, soy, rice, and cotton get most of the subsidies which shifts agriculture towards these grain crops instead of a variety of other crops that could be grown to meet market demands and soil building needs.

    • @wackynz3260
      @wackynz3260 Рік тому

      Gotta feed them obese Americans at any cost bro.

    • @jenssweerts50
      @jenssweerts50 Рік тому +17

      I'd say subsidised agriculture is not the problem, what is the problem are the reasons for these subsidies and how illogical they are in reality.

    • @stevenstart8728
      @stevenstart8728 Рік тому +6

      Maybe explain to the rest of the world what a good reason for subsidized ag would be and don't use food security as one because we all know that is false.

    • @pollyjazz
      @pollyjazz Рік тому +15

      Even more absurd is the government giving subsidies to not grow certain crops. Or also the practice of destroying crops because they can't get a good price or because it's cheaper than shipping them to where they could feed hungry people. Maybe don't grow what the market doesn't need? And not expect to get paid for it. And people think welfare is bad but sitting on your ass and not growing something and getting paid for it is ok?!

  • @Daniel-qy9mb
    @Daniel-qy9mb Рік тому +174

    Sadhguru was the first one to put me into this issue. I truly believe many of our ailments are a consequence of massive crop production on the same soil year after year.

    • @2100suprafreak
      @2100suprafreak Рік тому

      You're kinda right, if its done through conventional farming the crop isnt nutrient dense making us sick. If it's done through natural farming then the crop only gets healthier each year, making it more nutrient dense meaning people are healthy again.

    • @lalitapicholiya9348
      @lalitapicholiya9348 Рік тому +6

      True

    • @Rahul-ku7eg
      @Rahul-ku7eg Рік тому +4

      right

    • @Iquey
      @Iquey Рік тому +3

      They have to rotate!!!!

    • @pinecedar180
      @pinecedar180 Рік тому +10

      The root cause is too many people on the planet

  • @ruceblee969
    @ruceblee969 Рік тому +23

    One of the first doctors who saw this coming and promoted regenerative agriculture was Dr. Zach Bush. He's a visionary for world living in harmony with nature.

    • @ruceblee969
      @ruceblee969 Рік тому

      @@737simviator aborigines are medical doctors huh?

  • @shashikirant.r.6630
    @shashikirant.r.6630 Рік тому +63

    This is exactly what Sadhguru is telling the world through "Save Soil Movement". Thanks for spreading awareness. Appreciate the effort.

  • @dipupaul3908
    @dipupaul3908 Рік тому +170

    Thanks Shadguru for trying to make the wave on " Save Soil " movement - one of the genuine concerning factors for ecosystem of mother earth. Even 2/3 years ago I was not much concern and knowledgeable about this issue.

    • @tedc4982
      @tedc4982 Рік тому +2

      Well..., don't feel bad about it taking so long -
      all WOKE are exceptionally slow. In another decade you'll realize what nonsense you're spouting.

    • @SimonFranck100
      @SimonFranck100 Рік тому +1

      Nonsense.

    • @Greg-yu4ij
      @Greg-yu4ij Рік тому +1

      Nothing like a bunch of smart city folk to come out and tell farmers how to farm. When I built my house the environmentalists said construction was “raping the earth” so I had to install hundreds of feet of silt fences in February to get a planning permit. I had to jackhammer frozen soil to set them properly. Of course, as you can guess, the silt fence overkill led to more soil erosion than excavation for the foundation or any other activity. Forcing people to do something is never as effective as just talking to them and having them come to the same conclusion. Today we are struggling with affordable housing as a result of the adversarial relationship cities cultivate with construction companies.

    • @timverrecchia1654
      @timverrecchia1654 Рік тому +2

      @@tedc4982 soil is finite and the nutrients inside are finite to, it will eventually run out. you think we have surplus when we only need to dig a few metres down to find artifacts from the Romans or civilizations 3000 years old

    • @timverrecchia1654
      @timverrecchia1654 Рік тому +2

      @@Greg-yu4ij you think we have surplus soil when we only need to dig a few metres down to find artifacts from the Romans or civilizations 3000 years old, that should give you an idea how long it takes for soil to generate. Farmers are not scientists there production means and techniques are focused around profit their not exactly revolutionizing the industry which is what we need right now, not to mention the gov makes most of the rules around farming i.e what pesticides and what crops its gonna subsidize so its not like the farmers doing it for the good of the environment.
      the solutions which will save more money in the end (23 trillion) will not give a as high profit.
      honestly growing in soil is equivalent of using fossil fuel for energy. Hydroponic farming is the renewables of generating electricity. a green no waste no carbon no space take up solution which plants grow 40 percent faster with bigger yields and very little land use. the only expensive part is the initial cost.
      As with your house that's your gov problem not anything to do with the science around saving the earth or farming, the gov doesn't listen to the scientists so you can blame them for you construction issues

  • @andyjohnson3790
    @andyjohnson3790 Рік тому +5

    The best thing that the world can do is to dump ethanol. 40% of all corn grown in the US is only meant to be burned in vehicles even though it makes up only 7% of the US fuel demand.
    This equals almost 35 MILLION Acres of land that could be put to a much better use of growing actual food, or for conservation land

    • @jareds6611
      @jareds6611 Рік тому +1

      Bingo! Now with the new EPA regulation of 15% mandatory ethanol in our fuel that will now bring that 40% to 60% of all corn growth in the US, further complicating food shortages meanwhile it destroys our gas engines by stripping lubricants. Everything about ethanol is awful. One has to ask themselves, why are they doing this? Some of us know....

  • @rangerg7278
    @rangerg7278 Рік тому +2

    My father worked for the soul conservation service in Pennsylvania in the 1960's, and I learned from him how to do a better job working with farmers, road builders, loggers, and in landscaping as a result. Does this organization still exist?

    • @rangerg7278
      @rangerg7278 Рік тому +2

      Sorry. Soil Conservation Service !

  • @intreoo
    @intreoo Рік тому +28

    I thought everyone knew the unrivaled importance soil had. The fact that it appears most don't is concerning.

    • @gpayneinc
      @gpayneinc Рік тому

      I apologize I didn't see this before I posted. This is all mind boggling

    • @public.public
      @public.public Рік тому

      The would think farmers would know better but they continue to cut down hedges.

    • @NoNo-ce8xb
      @NoNo-ce8xb Рік тому

      they dont teach the Dust bowl in school anymore and people are getting DUMB AF ..

    • @charlespaynter8987
      @charlespaynter8987 Рік тому

      The majority of younger people from an urban background in the UK have very little idea about where food comes or how it’s produced. They don’t really care either so long as it’s readily available. Soil is seen as dirt- the stuff that’s messy and dirty on the bottom their shoes and needs washing off immediately if it gets on their hands. They’ve no idea about the role in their lives that it really plays

    • @tuckerbugeater
      @tuckerbugeater Рік тому

      @@charlespaynter8987 There's nothing they can do! We were brought into this world under this tyrannical system! They should do their stupid job and shut up just like the rest of us.

  • @jeremiasrobinson
    @jeremiasrobinson Рік тому +31

    The saddest part is that it wouldn't be too hard to take care of soil, we just don't.

    • @timothykeith1367
      @timothykeith1367 Рік тому +2

      This video is about 50 years behind the times. No-till is nothing new. As far as "we", I doubt that means yourself. With cropland costing an average of $12,000 an acre in many parts of the U.S., the land downers care very much about their investment. They put a lot of thought into agricultural practices, many having college degrees.

    • @anastasijatitko3872
      @anastasijatitko3872 Рік тому +2

      3-6% organic content has to be there in soil. And this needs to become a policy globally. Only then we will be able to sustain soil health. Right now it is well below 1% in the United States and keeps decreasing which will result in famines in as little as 20-30 years from now. All our eyes and leaders eyes should be on this, not any other nonsense… only then we can take care of soil.

  • @marcusmeyer3266
    @marcusmeyer3266 Рік тому +6

    J. Russel Smith predicted this in his book published in the late 1920's, Tree Crops. He even gave us solutions to the looming crisis. We are bad at listening to warnings.

    • @manjunath7497
      @manjunath7497 Рік тому

      Will read it

    • @ehombane
      @ehombane Рік тому

      Sumerian lived this 400 centuries ago.
      Due to intensive irrigation they salted the soil. The empire crumbled. People fled on the 4 horizons.
      I am curious where we will flee now.

  • @alexmaccity
    @alexmaccity Рік тому +10

    Thanks for talking about this. As a soil conservationist I appreciate content like this. I myself have my channel covered in information like this.

  • @tritron5519
    @tritron5519 Рік тому +18

    "Take the plow as a human impact"
    *proceeds to show a seeder*
    Sums up the agricultural knowledge of 98% of people : about zero

  • @tthappyrock368
    @tthappyrock368 Рік тому +121

    Building on fertile farm lands, mega mono cropping, grass lawns which take more resources to maintain and provide almost no benefit to nature also play roles in soil degradation, availability, and harm.

    • @roxaskinghearts
      @roxaskinghearts Рік тому +3

      heres the thing what if we raised elk elk eat the gas poop on the land and if a hunter wants a meal for him tho may be a bad idea counting all of American pollution

    • @RoseUnseen
      @RoseUnseen Рік тому

      Weed and almonds

    • @roxaskinghearts
      @roxaskinghearts Рік тому +3

      Weed he says as if weed stocks cant be basically used like hemp stocks that is a fireproof viable crafting material for homes and places to live or harvested and grown back up saving on water but then we could talk about the aquaponics side of that debate and how it basically has enough options right now that your a fool no matter how you want to look at it

    • @robertmarmaduke9721
      @robertmarmaduke9721 Рік тому

      All part of the new 'scarcity' narrative to justify Mandatory Energy Austerity of the Workers, while the Rich are busy strip-mining topsoil in sod farms for their palatial lawns and pro golf courses. Tell your local City Council the sod farmers are violating County EPA strip-mining laws and Libs will call you a kook, because all they care about is carbon taxes for their government salaries, COLA's and pensions. _Did you know every time they raise a carbon tax, they get COLA salary increases to cover it!?_

    • @bcubed72
      @bcubed72 Рік тому +5

      No; lawns are tantamount to leaving land fallow and improves soil quality. Doing something stupid, like trying to leave soil bare, is what's horrible for soil.
      My house was built in 1920 and has had a natural grass yard there apparently the entire time. When I put a garden in the back, the soil was nearly black, and loaded with earthworms! You have to dig down 18" to hit the clay soil my area is known for.
      Later with your nonsense, "TT."

  • @bsherman8236
    @bsherman8236 Рік тому +22

    Earth's got enough for everyone's need but not enough for everyone's greed

  • @dingfeldersmurfalot4560
    @dingfeldersmurfalot4560 Рік тому +6

    Rodale Institute was largely narrating this video. Rodale put out fantastic books about organic gardening and surrounding issues decades ago and should be a household name. Do look up some of their books and materials. They've been on the mission since before I was born, and I'm not young. Thank goodness they're still pushing these issues forward!

    • @b_uppy
      @b_uppy Рік тому

      Rodale still approaches much of its farming and gardening based on conventional ag practices by way of purchased inputs. It would be nice if it investigated more regarding permaculture.
      Used to buy their magazines all the time.

  • @okharren
    @okharren Рік тому +2

    wow, stunning (and very encouraging) that this is on mainstream media! The big challenge is getting congress and Big Ag to make fundamental changes and that is a very big challenge

  • @SquizzMe
    @SquizzMe Рік тому +57

    This is the price society pays for making itself a culture of consumption. When you overindulge in anything, you give it power over you. And going back is very difficult, if not impossible.

    • @117Industries
      @117Industries Рік тому +4

      Working on it. I think about this night and day. Politics is difficult, but not impossible to navigate. People will have a hard time accepting personal sacrifice, but pressure necessitates adaptation.

    • @dannyarcher6370
      @dannyarcher6370 Рік тому

      _This is the price society pays for making itself a culture of consumption_
      Get off the internet. Do you know how many industries you've supported with just this comment?

    • @SquizzMe
      @SquizzMe Рік тому

      @@dannyarcher6370 you really thought you were being smart with that post huh.

    • @117Industries
      @117Industries Рік тому +5

      @@SquizzMe Yeah you’re just stating the truth. I think it’s more mature to admit that we’re all collectively complicit in the state society is in, because we’ve all contributed to the state of things.

    • @SquizzMe
      @SquizzMe Рік тому +5

      @@117Industries absolutely. People love to blame corporations and politicians, but we're the ones buying into it all.

  • @tylercarriere3622
    @tylercarriere3622 Рік тому +5

    We are also running out of air. Stocking up on oxygen cans.

    • @TLPcreative
      @TLPcreative Рік тому +1

      i wonder why some people are creating panic for no reason at least say soil fertility but not this title

    • @tylercarriere3622
      @tylercarriere3622 Рік тому +1

      @@TLPcreative The problems they say are a crisis can easily be solved. Smart farmers alternate their land between crops and cattle. Our leaders want economic productiviry. Thats why they create panic. The most innovation has historically come out of disasters. More productivity, more profit.

  • @michaelmckeever2734
    @michaelmckeever2734 Рік тому +32

    "A nation that destroys its soil destroys itself" - President Franklin D Roosevelt

    • @hogantedley6227
      @hogantedley6227 Рік тому

      Did he really say that. Ya? It's like our country will destroy itself. One day has been said. As never he cold war for ov. In 86 without a shot being fired. Many things get stopped in time..

    • @joemag6032
      @joemag6032 Рік тому

      " I married my cousin " --- President Franklin D. Roosevelt
      Don't worry guys, she was one of his distant cousins .

  • @katherandefy
    @katherandefy Рік тому +21

    So good to hear this finally moving to soil conservation and regeneration.

  • @snakey973
    @snakey973 Рік тому +5

    This is what happens to humanity when there is no sense of belonging to the environment and no understanding of our utter dependence on it, pathetic lack of wisdom and greed above all other values

  • @rawknowledge5096
    @rawknowledge5096 Рік тому +3

    You can build soil through permaculture farming but it takes time ⏲ you can build an edible food forest in your backyard that can not only feed you year round but cool your house down as well just plant Different fruit trees

  • @yolo_burrito
    @yolo_burrito Рік тому +2

    In the US Farms that maintain or improve soil should be the only ones that get crop insurance. No till/low till is the solution.

  • @nephetula
    @nephetula Рік тому +2

    Topsoil constantly eroding, going into streams, rivers, and eventually into the ocean.
    Fill a cup with water and keep adding sugar. What happens to the water level? And now you know one of the reasons the oceans are rising, a reason that no one ever talks about.

  • @katherandefy
    @katherandefy Рік тому +3

    Think also about the millions of lawns and conventional advice to use synthetic pesticides and herbicides and fertilizers.

  • @norcalreppin1
    @norcalreppin1 Рік тому +3

    If you put the federal government in charge of the Sahara Desert, in 5 years there'd be a shortage of sand.

  • @louisehoff
    @louisehoff Рік тому +2

    Time to interview John Liu or see the VPRO documentary about his work. Regenerative agriculture is the way forward for us, our food and our ecosystem. Soil degradation is the result of monocrops and monsanto sterilization of the soil.

  • @cyclewisconsin105
    @cyclewisconsin105 Рік тому +5

    Here in central Wisconsin farmers keep cutting down more woodlots to plant subsidized corn and soybeans allowing more wind to blow away topsoil. We subsidize deforestation in the USA and only talk about the loss of forests in Brazil and other countries.

  • @MintRanch
    @MintRanch Рік тому +61

    Small farmers are more likely to take care of their land and soil. Unfortunately the gov favors large mega farms, and these monoculture mega farms care nothing for the land the gov gives them.

    • @someguy2135
      @someguy2135 Рік тому +1

      Good point.

    • @ecognitio9605
      @ecognitio9605 Рік тому +5

      "The Gov" is a strange way to say private agricultural giant's....hell the govt subsidies small farmers in the US so they aren't all "bought up".

    • @timothykeith1367
      @timothykeith1367 Рік тому +3

      Farmers do care about the soil, as long as they are earning a profit - which most must do because of the large loans they must repay. These days the value of rural land is rising. Marginal farmers often beat up the land attempting to scrape out a living.

    • @dannyarcher6370
      @dannyarcher6370 Рік тому +4

      Small farmers do not create the scales of economy required to feed billions of people.

    • @hurrdurrmurrgurr
      @hurrdurrmurrgurr Рік тому +1

      @@dannyarcher6370 With enough of them they do. The roadblock is the government and HOA's refusing to let anyone turn their yard into a farm instead of growing worthless grass.

  • @lissavanhouten6628
    @lissavanhouten6628 Рік тому +10

    It's the fault of INDUSTRIAL AGRICULTURE! This system has been depleting the soil for decades.

    • @MOOBOOSE
      @MOOBOOSE Рік тому

      And an overpopulated world requiring cheap food

    • @charlespaynter8987
      @charlespaynter8987 Рік тому +1

      And us consumers help drive that process. We’re all directly or indirectly involved in this - it is over simplistic to point the finger at just 1 part of food production

    • @tuckerbugeater
      @tuckerbugeater Рік тому

      @@MOOBOOSE Who created the cheap food!?

    • @tuckerbugeater
      @tuckerbugeater Рік тому

      @@charlespaynter8987 get bent

  • @dreamerofhanuman
    @dreamerofhanuman Рік тому +2

    Soil regeneration! You can even do it to your own property and have a lovely garden. I been working on a project of doing this for 4 years now. It’s possible!

  • @blanknoriega5726
    @blanknoriega5726 Рік тому +2

    wow.. mainstream news is covering no till farming? I've been doing it for 8 years and have been looking for land to buy to start a small scale CSA farm but its far to expensive for most farmers to even simply access land. We need to address this issue first and for most!!!

  • @surajjanampally7023
    @surajjanampally7023 Рік тому +18

    thanks for making this video. #SaveSoilSaveEnvironment . please support Save Soil movement

  • @climatehero
    @climatehero Рік тому +3

    I just realized that soil is the best way by far to sequester carbon.

    • @b_uppy
      @b_uppy Рік тому +1

      Yes. Thru plants that also sequester carbon, and soil microbes doing the same underground.

  • @NicholasLegg
    @NicholasLegg Рік тому

    I feel for my dude Reza, he looks so beat down from fighting for this cause... though he seems hella cool and super knowledgeable. I hope he continues on, we need more humans like that man.

  • @audreayarose3755
    @audreayarose3755 Рік тому +2

    go organic as possible - plant what you can yourself - gentle bug sprays - invite worms back into the garden to enrichen soil etc
    regardless of soil - the planet becomes more unstable - practicing preserving your food pickle/dehydrated meat etc, shortages in food is more common and you never know when youll need it before its too late

  • @josephjackson5088
    @josephjackson5088 Рік тому +3

    I live in a rural area. When i drive by all the acres and acres of farmland all I see is a sea of oil. Modern agriculture in this area is not possible with out a huge input of petroleum and where will it end. All I see is a fatalist attempt to maintain the status quo right up until the very end.

  • @downbntout
    @downbntout Рік тому +4

    Fact check: the 1940s book 'Plowman's Folly' was the beginning of turning bad ag around. Allan Savory's ideas made regen ag adaptable to many places. He learned from Andre Voisin in coastal France

  • @HHJoshHH
    @HHJoshHH Рік тому +4

    I wonder if better composting practices would work.
    Some ppl don’t use ferts from the store. For instance if you wanted nitrogen for your corn then you start soaking grass clippings. Maybe corn is a bad example bc it has such high nitro demand that grass may not keep up with it but it seems like we have everything we need to make good soil.
    We have worms, greens 🥬 and browns (cardboard 📦 ) plus some dead rotting trees and rocks and you got a nice nutrient rich soil.
    Don’t burn yard/land waste, mulch it into a compost pile, or soak it to release its nutrients into the water and use it.
    It feels like this is the next phony crisis that uneducated ppl will get behind. But maybe I’m missing something.

    • @outlaw0987654321
      @outlaw0987654321 Рік тому +2

      As new gardener who lives on an island were supplies are a hassle to deal with, i can tell you that what you say works. The soil here is pretty dead and is VERY hard to get things to grow at a somewhat productive level. During times where i'm waiting for my fertilizers to arrive (if i even bother to order any at all) I do all sorts of stuff to make ferts. from taking fish guts and burying them near plats, soaking weeds in water, getting sheep crap from my neighbor's sheep, getting seaweed to add to compost, collecting boxes and running them though a micro paper shredder for carbon and more. i still can't pull off a garden on the scale i want but when i focus all these things in the two small 4x6 foot beds, i get incredible results. A few months ago i got a small harvest of corn all without store bought ferts. All this and i have yet to add worms to the mix (they don't exist here.......like at all). I also use pine needles and seaweed as mulch.
      The point is, there is a surprising amount you can do with stuff you can find right around your community. I'm hoping to really scale up my compost production in a few months. I'm new to gardening, but i picked up pretty quickly that you can either sink cash or time and effort to get decent results. Ferts should still be on hand because things can happen, but you get what i'm sayin' yeah?

    • @HHJoshHH
      @HHJoshHH Рік тому +2

      @@outlaw0987654321 dude that’s so awesome! Yes I totally get you! lol
      You’re doing a great job!

  • @grumpy1311
    @grumpy1311 Рік тому +4

    Good piece.
    Make quality compost!!
    Don't throw food scraps in plastic bags along with other household chemicals to go into a Landfill!!! It takes alot of nutrients to grow those things

    • @christinajones7696
      @christinajones7696 Рік тому +2

      I would like to learn to compost. How do I start, what goes in compost soil? Forgive my ignorance please.

  • @jeffrypope9775
    @jeffrypope9775 Рік тому +6

    Its a result of Industrial farming that has happened in my lifetime. This is all a result of the end of small diversified farms of my childhood. Plowing isn't bad if its done correctly. It's counterintuitive, to rotate and this farm system is what i'm using and i also use small equipment and horses. It's worked well for the Amish and my forefathers.

  • @nyamanikoi
    @nyamanikoi Рік тому +4

    #SaveSoil ! If we implement policies to ensure a minimum of 3% organic content in agricultural soil, the situation of soil extinction can be reversed! There is still time, but we should act now to ensure a rich soil for future generations. Healthy soil also acts as a major carbon sink and water shed, alleviating problems with regards to water scarcity and carbon emissions. Soil is not dead, it is the living earth that nurtures us all.

  • @weareorigin
    @weareorigin Рік тому +2

    The soil in Midwest states (Ohio, Indiana, Kentucky) is kept empty for months. After the corn or soy beans are finished, it's just empty soil being hit by rain until next spring.

  • @nr6777
    @nr6777 Рік тому +1

    One of the best and very useful information. Thank you, CNBC! appreciate your efforts and trying to bring good news for a change.
    The problem which is not only to farming but also for several issues is Fed, Govt, private companies & most of the people want to become Rich vs good.
    So, as long money rules Fed, Govt, Companies and People, you can not solve insurance issues in farming because they too run behind money.
    First, we did bad very very long ago by going away from organic farming now we are doing further worst by turning farmlands to commercial lands.
    We wish & hope CNBC network can publish opportunities to change the world to move to good.

  • @willsteuer1621
    @willsteuer1621 Рік тому +3

    The US Dept. of Agriculture Land Bank has taken 28 Million acres out of food production. This year they will take another 4 Million acres out of production. Sorry about the food shortages.

  • @tride536
    @tride536 Рік тому +37

    The world:
    "We will all going to die from starvation in 50 years!"
    Americans:
    "The erosion will cost us about 26 trillion dollars."

    • @subodhpangyani1613
      @subodhpangyani1613 Рік тому

      They can only think in terms of money💸 and profit.

    • @liphrium9858
      @liphrium9858 Рік тому

      good

    • @cedriceric9730
      @cedriceric9730 Рік тому

      That's right

    • @hogantedley6227
      @hogantedley6227 Рік тому

      Die we th in 50 years. Starve maybe. Can't put a price on soul n life. Let's not say 26 trillion or quintillion or any price but it's life or death if ya our planet and all !!!

  • @lexkek5625
    @lexkek5625 Рік тому +2

    Anyone with plots of land, balcony, patio and any space that receives adequate sunlight, no matter how small should look into growing your own food. Vertical gardening is very good for small small living space. Container gardens are great ways to garden on patios and balconies. Do hydroponics or aeroponics if you don't want soil. Gardening is very flexible and is very rewarding.

  • @DanMcAdam950
    @DanMcAdam950 Рік тому +1

    Don’t till the soil. Seed directly into it. We have been doing it in Canada since the 60s. Disc drills work best

  • @ThirdCoastGardening
    @ThirdCoastGardening Рік тому +6

    Soil is the most interesting part of gardening. Such a fascinating science.

  • @mikeharrington5593
    @mikeharrington5593 Рік тому +4

    Soil degradation is very often a by-product of monoculture sustained by fertilizers creating a Iifeless sterilized soil. PhysOrg published this on 6 June:- "Cover crops not enough to improve soil after decades of continuous corn" (production).

    • @b_uppy
      @b_uppy Рік тому

      Exactly. They need multiple, continuous covercropping. They likely need to incorporate trees with deep roots to bring nutrients up from deep in the soil.
      Instead of relying on grain for starch in livestock feed plant nut trees and other trees to fill the gaps instead and let diverse livestock graze it. Saves a lot on shipping costs/fuel on feed, fertilizers and chemical inputs when they all grow together. Plus the farmer has back up crops if some fail...

  • @stojan7382
    @stojan7382 Рік тому +60

    Such an interesting video. I didn't realise that antibiotics came from soil and that soil holds 3 times as much CO2 as the atmosphere. We are in danger of losing this precious resource. This is one of many critical problems facing humanity at this time. Others include pandemics, resource wars and of course climate damage. These all reinforce each other. An excellent book that talks about these problems and mitigating solutions is called "Great Waves Of Change" by Marshall Vian Summers. I urge everyone reading this comment to take a look. It is good to see solutions being implemented.

    • @KenzoArts
      @KenzoArts Рік тому

      Yes Indeed! Soil is the basis of live forms in the entire universe!
      ua-cam.com/video/WmY2bxH7CNM/v-deo.html

    • @markanthony3275
      @markanthony3275 Рік тому

      Lies...lies are the biggest problem...like lies about climate change and CO2 being a threat. CO2 has never been as low as 475 ppm like it is right now...and these idiots want to reduce that? How are the world's forests and vegetation going to survive without CO2...their FOOD? The science never added up...because it's all driven by political ambition to fool people into accepting a global government...telling them that that's the only way to resolve the "crisis".
      I'm gonna give you a few quotes that will give you an idea of where this all started and where it's all going.
      " I believe that when the next world crisis happens, the world will accept a global government" David Rockefeller.
      " Isn't the only hope for the planet that the industrialized nations collapse? Isn't it our responsibility to make sure that happens?" Maurice Strong U.N. chairman and co-creator of "Earth day".
      " We needed a crisis to unite humanity...it could be a real one or one invented for the purpose...we chose climate change and the environment" from "The First Global Revolution" by King and Schneider/ Club of Rome (1992).
      "You will own nothing , and you will be happy" Klaus Schwab chairman of the World Economic Forum.

    • @johnchapman5125
      @johnchapman5125 Рік тому

      Thank you, Stojan.

    • @arronbatchvarov5035
      @arronbatchvarov5035 Рік тому

      There is more oxygen in the soil than the air. Do you even hear what's coming out of your mind you belive that????

    • @tuckerhiggins4336
      @tuckerhiggins4336 Рік тому

      Soil CO2 being released is the biggest contributer to atmospheric CO2 by far. Dwarfs everything else. You never find that anywhere

  • @nihilisticpunk24
    @nihilisticpunk24 Рік тому +15

    Next episode: “The Looming Oxygen Shortage”, people are just passing out left and right from a shortage of oxygen.

    • @own4801
      @own4801 Рік тому +2

      Well actually, you are completely wrong.

    • @BlkDsl
      @BlkDsl Рік тому +1

      😂😂😂 i lnow right!! whats next? "The looming sunlight shortage"

    • @Iquey
      @Iquey Рік тому

      @@BlkDsl I don't claim that. 💀🥹 That would be after a nuclear war/nuclear winter

  • @gf1227
    @gf1227 Рік тому +12

    Sadhguru’s efforts are coming to life! At least the discussion has started 👏👏👏👏

  • @Your_Wife.s_Boyfriend
    @Your_Wife.s_Boyfriend Рік тому +7

    The world seems to be running out of everything except for politicians. I wonder why

    • @NorthOfWindsor
      @NorthOfWindsor Рік тому

      Representative Democracy is the worst. Now that we live in a world without segregation, where everyone has a voice, we should be a direct democracy run by referendums

    • @dannyarcher6370
      @dannyarcher6370 Рік тому +1

      You keep voting for them?

    • @NorthOfWindsor
      @NorthOfWindsor Рік тому

      @@dannyarcher6370 what are we supposed to do, violently revolt and overrun them? We’re stuck here

    • @VoteForBukele
      @VoteForBukele Рік тому

      It’s not the politicians fault. It’s you. There are just too many of you and most of you don’t actually do anything other than consume. Most of your professions are fake or redundant. And I guarantee you there are just as many soil deniers as there are everything else deniers. So in short, enjoy the show.

    • @Your_Wife.s_Boyfriend
      @Your_Wife.s_Boyfriend Рік тому

      @@VoteForBukele Stop breathing through your mouth, smooth brain.

  • @brianjohnson6053
    @brianjohnson6053 Рік тому +2

    Really heard this song and dance 40 years ago and life goes on

  • @mackpines
    @mackpines Рік тому +6

    Of all the things that we've had shortages of, the one I wouldn't have thought of was soil!

    • @vsstdtbs3705
      @vsstdtbs3705 Рік тому

      it happens when civilizations become feminised.
      Beginning of rome, men could put down their subjects - wives and slaves. controlled the population. End of of rome was womens rights, overpopulation, then collapse. democracy started off with only men voting, now most voters are women. happening again.

    • @vsstdtbs3705
      @vsstdtbs3705 Рік тому

      @@cedriceric9730 lets worship batman and allah instead, other made-up stories, to save the world.

  • @johnshafer7214
    @johnshafer7214 Рік тому +16

    We kept pushing for suburbanization and stress the remaining soil. We need soil scientist and soil conservationist and treat it as a resource that's endangered.

  • @investmentinfogeek8679
    @investmentinfogeek8679 Рік тому +31

    #savesoil let's make it happen

  • @gordonbone3689
    @gordonbone3689 11 місяців тому

    In Europe there was hedgerows on every farm. The is a program in the US that is reintroducing hedgerows on farms. They help prevent wind erosion. They also house multiple species of birds and pollinating insects. Windrows can also be composed of food bearing berry bushes or berry bushes for birds.

  • @jawick
    @jawick Рік тому +2

    This is a joke when no one talks about the #1 loss of soil -- building and paving over the soil by humans for homes, schools, stores, corporations, government, and roads then all the complaining of flooding with no soil to absorb heavy rains and extreme heat at night from heat absorb by concrete during the day.

  • @A3Kr0n
    @A3Kr0n Рік тому +4

    This isn't new, our 1969 World Book encyclopedia had a good section on soil loss in our country and what a problem it is. That was 1969. In the 1970's came low and no till farming to try and reduce soil loss.

    • @hogantedley6227
      @hogantedley6227 Рік тому

      I 💬 no Jimmy Carter had a future 2000 report done. Where it said lots more of the world will be starving and by 2050 or something well barely he able to feed our own people. Soul erosion Shure needs to stop. At same time make it the best growth medium to here is.! Healthy soul/ water healthy planet! People too.. as we colonize other planets etc too.. all these wars are such a waste of resources people , pollution, all of it!! Can't our politicians get it 👍 right??

  • @SK-jq8um
    @SK-jq8um Рік тому +5

    All of this coming from people that couldn't grow their own grass and need people to do their chores for them. Everything is easier said than done when you have absolutely no experience in growing or making anything you consume.

    • @mostlyguesses8385
      @mostlyguesses8385 Рік тому +1

      The idea we're running out of soil, when most of US farmland has about 200 feet thick of good soil is crazy. We could scoop out top 100 feet and send it to middle east to replace their sand, but soil is so cheap the cost of transport is higher. We are not running out of soil, nor rock, nor air, nor idiots. Some say we should scoop some Iowa soil and send it to rocky plateaus in Utah, there they literally have no soil in the West since that land was formed recently and with more volcanism the eastern 2/3rds of USA has average age of 1,000,000,000 years old plenty of time to make soil, from rock, plus glaciers scooped up Canadian soil and brough it south to drop another 100 feet on Minnesota here. Man we have sooooo much good soil it is weird.

  • @imianco8079
    @imianco8079 Рік тому

    had no idea.. now i know about the issue.. thank you!!

    • @mikekahl5609
      @mikekahl5609 Рік тому

      No you don't.
      This is all political brainwashing.

    • @imianco8079
      @imianco8079 Рік тому

      @@mikekahl5609 no thank you fox news! travel the world and understand differences and our challenges.. it is 122F in pakistan & india the world is changing while you deny!

    • @mikekahl5609
      @mikekahl5609 Рік тому

      @@imianco8079 who is denying anything? I don't watch fox news. I'm a farmer saving the soil.

  • @nunyabidness3075
    @nunyabidness3075 Рік тому +2

    Seems to me if we can collect all the excrement created on Capitol Hill, we could rejuvenate all the crop land in North America with extras for export.

  • @360sblulev
    @360sblulev Рік тому +10

    "why the world is running out soil"
    background: ok so 2 billion years ago stay with me
    LOL

  • @pjacobsen1000
    @pjacobsen1000 Рік тому +47

    Many of the solutions proposed are already being implemented in more and more industrialized countries, but it's a relatively slow process. I think decade by decade we'll continue to see improvements in our environment. As long as we're moving in the right direction I'm pretty happy.

    • @JohnDoe-tx8eu
      @JohnDoe-tx8eu Рік тому +4

      "As long as we're moving in the right direction" we just spent the amount of money needed to fix hunger in our country, on funding another foreign war.... we are definitely not going the right direction

    • @pjacobsen1000
      @pjacobsen1000 Рік тому +5

      @@JohnDoe-tx8eu Yes, we are, you can't see it. You're looking at the trees instead of the forest.

    • @michaelgriffith5119
      @michaelgriffith5119 Рік тому +6

      We don't have decades.

    • @pjacobsen1000
      @pjacobsen1000 Рік тому +2

      @@michaelgriffith5119 We don't have decades? Then how long do we have? When does it end?

    • @julmaass
      @julmaass Рік тому +1

      @@JohnDoe-tx8eu except the war is causing hunger by preventing Ukrainian wheat from going to market and driving up oil prices, and the aggressor, Russia, is fixing oil prices as part of OPEC+, driving up energy costs for the world's poor. One can't look at these numbers in isolation. You could probably fix a lot of domestic problems by completely eliminating the national defense budget.

  • @josemilian4167
    @josemilian4167 Рік тому

    subsidies are great but information network is also important. Helps very little to know that their are better ways to do things if you don't have a way to sift through all the information out there and find they methods that work better. If it's difficult to find or difficult to understand people won't adapt new techniques as quickly.

  • @Zt3v3
    @Zt3v3 Рік тому +2

    All the problems in the world seem overwhelming, and if I'm honest, I'm becoming desensitized to hearing about them. Running out of sand, running out of soil, running out of water, I could go on and on.

  • @SUBHRAJYOTI17042
    @SUBHRAJYOTI17042 Рік тому +17

    Where is sadguru who started soil erosion attention

    • @ecognitio9605
      @ecognitio9605 Рік тому +1

      Lol...

    • @varadhk3159
      @varadhk3159 Рік тому +4

      I am womdering too. Hes working so hard and there is no mention of him in the video

    • @bajajsahb
      @bajajsahb Рік тому +2

      Yes. Why no mention of Save Soil movement ?

    • @francribaj6506
      @francribaj6506 Рік тому +1

      because he is a "religious" bearded guy look alike, therefore no mention

    • @dekumutant
      @dekumutant Місяць тому

      Because he didn't? Just because you heard it from him first doesn't mean he was the only or first voice

  • @ameysutar9932
    @ameysutar9932 Рік тому +7

    Thank you CNBC for producing this documentary.

  • @66652
    @66652 Рік тому

    Great👍👏😊😊 we are listing everything soil also👌👌

  • @soilwaterx
    @soilwaterx Рік тому

    At SoilWater we agree in full and that is why we have worked to now make RESCAYPE micronised soil conditioner available for saving soil particles and water and Organic Matter!

  • @maytons
    @maytons Рік тому +18

    In nature, annuals are fairly rare, and yet this is what the vast majority of farmers plant. Perennials on the other hand are far more common in nature and produce for many years without the need to constantly destroy the mycelium structure in the soil.

    • @gshrdy5415
      @gshrdy5415 Рік тому +1

      There are numerous varieties of millets that don't require too much tilling or fertilizers or pesticides, and produce is much higher comparing to rice, wheat and corn the main culprits of soil erosion, water table depletion and decease.

    • @freezepaladin
      @freezepaladin Рік тому +2

      True that. Annual is humans' term to satisfy their greed. Everything boils down to capitalism. Unsustainable farming, such as disruptive technology, monoculture, chemical fertilizer and pesticides, etc., destroy the entire soil ecosystem and beyond, not only mycelium structure. Once the damage is done in a large scale it's very difficult to recover.
      The best method for sustainable farming by far is permaculture. It takes into account everything in the environment with minimum intervention from humans. Pests are considered parts of the ecosystem that play their own important roles, unlike in conventional farming where they are obliterated using chemicals.

    • @wesselvanwyk1335
      @wesselvanwyk1335 Рік тому

      @ Dave Mayton - the problem is that most if not all your vegetables and grains are annual plants and without them you cannot feed the world.

    • @maytons
      @maytons Рік тому

      @@wesselvanwyk1335 What you mean is that you cannot feed humans in a cheap and convenient manner without grains and annuals. Neither of us is going to change the consumption habits of 8 billion people.

    • @maytons
      @maytons Рік тому +1

      @@wesselvanwyk1335 What you mean is that "you cannot feed the world" though the standard industrial process when people move to annuals vs perennials.

  • @mrwang420
    @mrwang420 Рік тому +5

    Lack of Cattle Feralization. That's why. Cattle manure is needed to put the stuff back into the dirt to turn into soil.

    • @timothykeith1367
      @timothykeith1367 Рік тому

      There are feral hogs, but I've never seen feral cattle. I know you meant fertilization!

  • @jtmcrash
    @jtmcrash Рік тому +1

    Some cannabis agriculture is using the living soil method of growing and it has had surprising results and is completely self sustaining

  • @BaltimoresBerzerker
    @BaltimoresBerzerker Рік тому

    Broad forking is a better alternative to the plow when breaking new ground for agriculture, for those who can't afford to buy multiple truckloads of compost a season for years to do no-till. Pioneer crops such as potato and high turn over root crops help break up the soil for future plantings of more fickle crops.

  • @practicalgurus2147
    @practicalgurus2147 Рік тому +13

    Thanks Sadhguru. Finally mainstream media and world waking up to talk about the problem. Hopefully will action to Save soil soonest.

  • @royal-recordz
    @royal-recordz Рік тому +5

    Over population and pollution is getting out of hand.

  • @GeckoHiker
    @GeckoHiker Рік тому +1

    My farming family didn't lose their soil in Oklahoma during the Dust Bowl era because they took care of the soil. They stayed, grew food, and kept their community supplied. Chemicals, pesticides, and greed destroy life. Soil is alive. Composting is carbon sequestration. And knowing how to maintain the right mixture of fungal and bacterial organisms is fundamental to nutrient uptake for food crops. You can plant less while providing more nutrition. Industrial farming has destroyed food security.

    • @GeckoHiker
      @GeckoHiker Рік тому +1

      @@schmetterling4477i run a profitable farming based homestead and a desk job based business--with family and a happy labor pool. My goal is sustainable farming and sustainable, debt-free living. How do you think all those "profitable farms" went bust? The same one hundred years ago as today, chemical farmers are nothing more than sharecroppers to their mortgage holders and corporate owners.
      When a pesky drought or lack of foreign chemicals or rising diesel prices gives them a little bit of awkwardness they go bust. They can't switch crops or methods on a dime, but I can.
      Even the pesky pandemic didn't hurt our business. We easily switched from restaurant markets to local consumers. No greens, vegetables, or mushrooms died in the fields. We started a cannery for the excess, which we can rent to local farmers when we don't need it.
      We ramped up the free-range egg laying and goat milk departments. We increased mushroom production and capacity. Last year we finished another two earth sheltered greenhouses. We used to have half our crops in raised beds. This March we completed a 1/8 acre project to implement lowered beds, two feet below ground as a proof of concept for growing heat sensitive crops in rising temperatures. We ordered shade cloth which was needed for six straight weeks of dangerously high heat in Late June, all of July, and a bit of August. We increased production and profit in the last three years with less labor. We put labor to work on new projects.
      Now we are getting spring weather in August and planting another season that is expected to be harvested in October-December. The greenhouses should continue to produce until next summer when it gets too hot. For the past five years we have "heated" the greenhouses with compost in the winter. Just bags of compost piled against the base of each greenhouse, with happy microorganisms ensuring we approach zero-waste.
      The point of this is that nearly anybody with a desk job in suburbia could produce a great deal of food for their families, indoors, outdoors, and in greenhouses. I grew up in the homesteading life, raised by farmers who thrived during previous hard times. I am not afraid to get my hands dirty or face real life challenges. When your hands are busy in the dirt there is no room for whining.

    • @GeckoHiker
      @GeckoHiker Рік тому +1

      @@schmetterling4477 Is that all you've got? Clearly, you've never grown anything worth eating. Nobody ever made any money growing iceburg lettuce with an infusion of e-coli. Cultured mushrooms, greens, and free-range everything generate a much higher ROI than you can comprehend. And its a recession-proof, inflation-proof, and disaster-proof business model.

  • @abhinavmisrha4259
    @abhinavmisrha4259 Рік тому +2

    Sadguru plays great role to aware people about this issue way before any of these picking up.

  • @tonydeveyra4611
    @tonydeveyra4611 Рік тому +35

    Another important thing to note about no-till farming is that it requires significantly less horsepower per acre. This means fuel savings. Further down the line, it means that no-till operations will have an easier time upgrading to electric tractors, too.

    • @fuzzystuff8023
      @fuzzystuff8023 Рік тому +3

      furthermore, we don't need a 6ton tractor to run a flail mower, thus reducing soil compaction

    • @someguy2135
      @someguy2135 Рік тому +1

      Veganic farming, using no till and composting is the gold standard for sustainable, environment friendly agriculture. It has proven that manure is not needed for soil enrichment or food production.

    • @tonydeveyra4611
      @tonydeveyra4611 Рік тому +1

      @@someguy2135 the most scalable form of regenerative land management is managed intensive grazing. There are some challenges to fully integrating that with no-till grain production so there will be some parallel evolution of these systems with some overlap.

    • @timothykeith1367
      @timothykeith1367 Рік тому +6

      There won't be electric tractors in any significant numbers. Batteries lack the energy density for
      heavy equipment. The larger the diesel powered
      equipment, the more efficient is the energy utilization. If anything, conventional farm equipment will become larger. Electric tractors can be used on small operations, as is already done to some extent, but batteries are not suited to tilling thousands of acres. Small farming operations are also very labor intensive.

    • @someguy2135
      @someguy2135 Рік тому

      @@tonydeveyra4611 Animal agriculture is not sustainable considering the effect it has on our environment and climate change. So called "regenerative grazing" reduces the problems, but does not eliminate them. The carbon sequestration in the soil is limited, since it reaches a saturation point. Animal ag is a major cause of green house gasses, especially ruminants like cattle and sheep. The huge numbers of them produce a significant amount of methane which is 80 times more potent than CO2 in the first years, and then dissipates over about 100 years time. Many reports average out the effect to 20 times more potent.

  • @gregorysagegreene
    @gregorysagegreene Рік тому +7

    In the California Central Valley Delta soil levels on the fields, after a hundred years, are many feet below the highway. Farming is one of our most basic exploits of 'free' natural resources. Yet all we still know to do with it is 'mine' the soil for it's 'something for nothing' value. Amazes me with the explosion of technology since early this century that we still haven't addressed replacing or at least augmenting all of the 'modern' processes we use to live on the planet with systems more advanced toward something like many of the cyclical closed-loop style things we see existing in nature already. No reason why we couldn't develop artificial sustainability in everything from chemical reaction chains on up.

    • @deere7227
      @deere7227 Рік тому

      Ca Delta soils are high organic so decomposition rates are higher.

  • @gpayneinc
    @gpayneinc Рік тому +1

    This is common knowledge for years. This is NOT NEW. They act like this is a finding. I'm disgusted.

  • @Aryvrt
    @Aryvrt Рік тому +2

    ☀️🙂🚩🙏🕉️
    A Sage from the Dharmic Bharat gave the consciousness to this world about saving soil. #SaveSoil
    ☀️🙂🚩🙏🕉️

  • @Davethreshold
    @Davethreshold Рік тому +7

    Very informative! Unlike many of the problems of our world, fixing this will be easier than many others. I am confident we will be able to do it.

    • @ionorreastragicomicchannel
      @ionorreastragicomicchannel Рік тому +2

      Plenty of corporations will not be happy about the lost income when going natural become mainstream, so I expect nothing less than fearmongering from big corporations making big bucks from current agriculture practices comparable to fossil lobby efforts to dismiss human impact on climate change.

    • @Davethreshold
      @Davethreshold Рік тому

      @@ionorreastragicomicchannel Yes! Many movies have been made about that type of thing. ~ The new chemical which will put a huge worldwide company out of business, and they send a hit-squad after the only physicist who knows the key info.

    • @falfield
      @falfield Рік тому

      @@Davethreshold Are you dismissing the malign influence of misinformation by big vested interests as the subject only of movie fiction? Or are you agreeing with Ionor and in so doing, dismantling your belief this problem will be easy to fix and undermining your confidence we'll do it.

    • @Davethreshold
      @Davethreshold Рік тому

      @@falfield I BLOCK pseudo-intillectuals.

    • @falfield
      @falfield Рік тому

      @@Davethreshold I think you must suffer a bit from rushes of blood, which then blind your ability to see clearly. So your irritation at a perceived slight by me - and maybe a chip on your shoulder as well - led to your hasty outburst. In fact, mine was a question without implicit criticism, aimed to work out what the hell it is you are trying to say with your movie reference. You say fixing the world's soils will be easy and are confident we'll do it. Why is that? Ionor has given you a powerful reason why it WON'T be easy.

  • @mujinarokko1796
    @mujinarokko1796 Рік тому +13

    It seems illusion, if one looks at what happened in Sri-Lanka. Sri-Lanka introduced full organic farming, which upset agribusiness, such as Monsanto (Bayer), and the government got bankrupt. Agribusinesses have more money than a developing nation.

    • @JohnDoe-tx8eu
      @JohnDoe-tx8eu Рік тому

      Monsanto is such a horror show too!! the same people who brought the world agent orange are now being trusted to grow food!!!

    • @chrisrodgers4950
      @chrisrodgers4950 Рік тому

      Yes!! The American model of destroying soil with glyphosate is being exported worldwide so the situation is not good. Bayer has an utter monopoly on the food supply. What little yields our soil is currently providing is not nutritious at all, it actually makes you sick so you get prescribed Bayer’s pharmaceutical products.

    • @mostlyguesses8385
      @mostlyguesses8385 Рік тому

      Sri Lanka crop production fell by half going organic, and 10000s will starve, those who push organic too much are murderers.

  • @jcarey568
    @jcarey568 Рік тому

    Please cover how in the same area of Kutztown, PA, an area in the Great Valley that has some of the best soils in the country, farmland is incredibly expensive and is being sold to warehouses. Once that soil is moved and built upon, it's gone forever.

  • @TherealSakuraKei
    @TherealSakuraKei Рік тому +2

    Its lovely seeing people put the earths natural process to work to restore the soil.
    Our planet has such a beautiful design.

  • @hammerheadjason
    @hammerheadjason Рік тому +42

    Rodale's processes would work very well if we had a much larger percentage of the population owning and managing small farms. Maintaining yields and nutrient density are pressing challenges to feed the growing population without more participants. Centralized food production has given us the gift as a society to do other things with our labor, but I wonder if we are now seeing the costs of having fewer farmers as a nation.

    • @andrewjensen8189
      @andrewjensen8189 Рік тому +3

      Industrial farming definitely has its benefits, but we bet too big on it. Now we need to return alot of farms back to regenerative practices.

    • @TheStryderPrime
      @TheStryderPrime Рік тому

      NO !!! We need to stop increasing our population to maintain a balance !!!

    • @davidkottman3440
      @davidkottman3440 Рік тому +3

      I grew up in farming community and have farmed myself since 1980 & can remember the early '60s... It really comes down to the information & expectations individuals and society has for their farms. Much of the degradation in the US took place during the early 20th century when impoverished small farms dominated agriculture. Sometimes larger farms can better afford conservation efforts over large areas, other times they simply destroy more faster... I think scale of production & involvement of people are important issues, but not always directly linked to conservation issues.

    • @jonigarciajg
      @jonigarciajg Рік тому +1

      I agree and it's sad that they are many people that would love to be farmers, but they are forced to do something else because of economic barriers. So this centralized that once gave us more choices has now taken away the choice of some.

  • @shammusomalley8986
    @shammusomalley8986 Рік тому +10

    I’m old enough to remember when the world was running out of sand😆

  • @SamRoxxJDM
    @SamRoxxJDM Рік тому +2

    use the tons of Sargassum Seaweed washed up in Florida as organic matter

  • @Indi.a.B33ger.Viru.s.Nation
    @Indi.a.B33ger.Viru.s.Nation Рік тому +2

    Maybe if they stopped pumping toxic pesticides and herbicides...
    The natural top soil will still function properly.