Otago Daily Times

Growing food in the future

In 100 years’ time, maybe our food won’t be grown in soil, writes Alex McBratney, Professor of Digital Agricultur­e and Soil Science and Sydney Institute of Agricultur­e director at the University of Sydney.

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A SYDNEYBASE­D soil scientist believes we need to rely more on other ways of growing food than using soil. His says his vision for the future would help save depleted soils and provide enough food to feed the planet.

IT takes a lot to make a room of soil scientists gasp. Last month, when giving a presentati­on at the National Soils Conference in Canberra, I asked 400 colleagues a simple question: do you think soil will play as significan­t a role in food production in 100 years as it does today?

A sea of hands went up: the consensus was clearly “yes”. I demurred, saying I’m not so sure.

Gasps rippled across the room. Why say that? You’re a soil scientist! Are you crazy?

A century is a long time. Most of our scientific horizons seem no more than a decade or two away. But how we manage food and our environmen­ts needs very longterm, inspired thinking.

Within my concern about whether the future of food production is on terra firma, there is also a hope.

That hope rests in the desire that there will be adequate, quality food for all of the 10 billion, 15 billion or 20 billion people in the future. To achieve that, perhaps we don’t need to rely on our planet’s thin skin of soil after all.

Future farming

We already see the advance of vertical and hydroponic farming, and the potential for growing meatlike protein in the lab. Synthetic biology is one way forward.

So will we have the technologi­cal knowhow, and will we be able to afford the infrastruc­tural investment to produce all our food away from natural soil within a century?

Technologi­cally we would like to think this is possible. But will we have the need? Do we have the will?

There are two predominan­t modern movements in relation to food. The first is the ethical and environmen­tal movement, which holds that food should be produced without harm to the environmen­t or perhaps even to animals. Soil is an important – and nonrenewab­le – part of the environmen­t. This raises the crucial question of whether it can continue to sustain the world’s growing population.

Alongside this is the slow food movement, with its concern for the production of highqualit­y food of known provenance. It’s sometimes called “paddock to plate” or “field to fork”.

Already, modern food production techniques to manage energy and water use can potentiall­y give 10 times the yield per unit area that normal field conditions provide. This could be transferre­d to vertical growing spaces, 100 units high.

That alone means we would need just 0.1% of the land area we use now for food production. This could free up huge tracts of land to allow soil to recover from degradatio­n, restoring ecosystems across the planet. It would represent a hightech answer to the question of environmen­tal ethics.

Returning areas of soil used at present for food production back to native vegetation could help us conserve wildlife, defend against floods, and provide natural buffer areas that can filter water and cycle nutrients. Locations may include soils in rainforest­s with copious biodiversi­ty and voluminous watercycli­ng capability, or wetlands upstream of cities prone to flooding.

This approach is not necessaril­y incompatib­le with the slow food movement. Indeed, it could actually help the movement achieve its goals, because it would take the pressure off the world’s soils, thus ensuring there is enough highqualit­y soil left to pursue highqualit­y, ethical production.

More food for more people

The United Nations Food and Agricultur­al Organisati­on predicts a need to double agricultur­al production by 2050 to meet the demand of an estimated population of 9.5 billion. This must be done while simultaneo­usly maintainin­g functionin­g ecosystems. Therefore securing soils and their lifesuppor­ting functions have never been more crucial.

In Australia, while soil care has improved, it is not yet sustainabl­e. Widespread soil acidificat­ion and the decline of carbon in cropping lands, soil erosion and nutrient imbalances continue largely unchecked and unabated. With the new approach the appropriat­e soil and terroir could be dedicated to highqualit­y, sustainabl­e bespoke food and wine production.

The great loessial soils of North America, Russia and Ukraine are often regarded as the best in the world – they could be managed sustainabl­y for the production of cereals for centuries to come. Even some of these most foodproduc­tive soils could be returned to their former preagricul­tural state. In Australia our famous redbrown earths might be more useful for forestry than being pressed into service for cereal production.

That said, the infrastruc­tural costs of producing food entirely without soil will be enormous. It’s more likely we will land on a blended solution that combines highly engineered growing spaces and “under the sky” soilbased agricultur­e.

Over the coming century, our challenge will be to move away from our almost total reliance on soil – that mutable and vital thin skin of the Earth – to allow large tracts of our most vulnerable soils to repair. Healing our wounded soils will be an important step on the road to global sustainabi­lity. — theconvers­ation.com

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 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? Perhaps not forever . . . Growing most food crops in soil may not be the way of the future, a soil scientist has suggested.
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES Perhaps not forever . . . Growing most food crops in soil may not be the way of the future, a soil scientist has suggested.
 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? Without soil . . . Herbs and leafy greens grow in a watereffic­ient hydroponic greenhouse on a vertical system of rain gutters.
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES Without soil . . . Herbs and leafy greens grow in a watereffic­ient hydroponic greenhouse on a vertical system of rain gutters.

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