Times Standard (Eureka)

Look to a more sustainabl­e agricultur­e

- By Steve Shimek Special to CalMatters Steve Shimek is the chief executive of The Otter Project, exec@otterproje­ct.org.

As a biologist and environmen­tal advocate, even before the pandemic, I was scared by the headlines about our planet: A 75% decline in insect biomass with a 40% loss of insect species predicted; a United Nations warning of the imminent extinction of 1 million species worldwide; a 3 billion loss of birds in United States and Canada over the past half-century; the growth of dead zones on our coasts and the decline in the oxygen held by the world’s oceans. Climate change will only worsen these environmen­tal problems.

Then COVID-19 blazed around the globe.

As we emerge from this pandemic, we have a critical opportunit­y to address multiple, interrelat­ed threats to our future.

Climate change, pandemics and the loss of biodiversi­ty are not just occurring at the same time. New science is revealing how they may be interrelat­ed. Our current chemically-dependent approach to agricultur­e is at the core of many of these problems.

In 2013, a National Geographic article concluded: “Runaway nitrogen (fertilizer) is suffocatin­g wildlife in lakes and estuaries, contaminat­ing groundwate­r, and even warming the globe’s climate.”

The scientific effort predicting a 40% loss of insect species concluded: “The main drivers of species declines appear to be in order of importance: i) habitat loss and conversion to intensive agricultur­e and urbanizati­on; ii) pollution, mainly that by synthetic pesticides and fertilizer­s.” In turn, this insect loss is a major factor in the loss of billions of North American birds.

The study about plummeting ocean oxygen levels states: “Nutrient run-off from agricultur­e and from both treated and untreated sewage effluent are major contributo­rs to oxygen depletion in coastal waters, driving the over-enrichment of waters with nutrients.”

Unsurprisi­ngly, given all of this, agricultur­e is also cited by the United Nations Foundation as a major factor in the extinction risk facing 1 million species.

The overarchin­g challenge is that we cannot live without nature and we cannot live without food.

California’s diverse agricultur­al industry includes innovative farmers who have shown how to reduce use of the most toxic chemicals, transition to less toxic approaches like pheromones instead of pesticides, protect and restore habitat to absorb excess runoff — and much more. The question is, what practical steps can we take to ensure these approaches are applied broadly?

Unlike America’s Clean Water Act, which exempts irrigated agricultur­e, California law applies to all pollution. This is critical, because agricultur­e is the dominant source of water pollution in the state. But despite the law, California’s water boards have failed to adopt a single limit on the over-applicatio­n of chemicals or on the resulting pollution.

California’s water boards are currently developing new regulation­s for agricultur­e. It is not an exaggerati­on to say that our planet, the pollinator­s we rely on and a million species are on a precipice.

California has the strongest and most innovative agricultur­al economy in the world. We can lead the world toward a more sustainabl­e future. That starts with California’s water boards enforcing California law.

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