The
present system for American agriculture cannot long endure.
Our farms have succeeded in producing abundant food and fiber.
But the costs and fragility of that success are becoming each
day more evident.
Sustainable alternatives already prove their value. Not
only are they more efficient in their use of energy, biological
sources of fertility and pest management, they also enhance
rural communities and encourage families to remain on the
land. We commit ourselves to hastening the broad adoption
of an agriculture that is ecologically sound, economically
viable, fair, and humane. sustainable agriculture will require
and support a sustainable society. Our challenge is to meet
human needs without denying our descendants' birthright to
the natural inheritance of this planet. We must revere the
earth, sustaining and regenerating both nature and our communities.
People are a part of nature, not separate from it. Sustainable
agriculture is as attainable as it is necessary. Though we
recognize difficulties in this transformation , we can state
with confidence that in every region there are farm families
profitably growing healthy food through a practical partnership
with nature. A sustainable agriculture that provides
nourishing food, protects those who work the land, helps stabilize
the earth's climate, and safeguards soil and water depends
on our ability to meet a number of challenges. We must address
those challenges without delay.
Seven Challenges
·
Promote and sustain healthy rural communities.
Healthy rural communities are attractive and equitable for
farmers, farm workers, and their families. The continuation
of traditional values and farming wisdom depends on a stable,
multi-generational population. Absentee or corporate land
ownership and the ever-increasing size of farms diminish rural
life.
·
Expand opportunities for new and existing farmers to prosper
using sustainable systems.
We must devise ways to help people get started in sustainable
farming. Reliable information on sustainable agriculture needs
to be readily available to farmers, extension agents, bankers,
and others. Training and apprenticeship programs should be
provided for entry-level farmers and established conventional
farmers interested in making the transition. Tax forgiveness
and other incentives should be devised to ease the financial
stress of new and transitional farmers.
·
Inspire the public to value safe and healthy food.
The biological quality of food is known to affect the health
and well-being of those who eat it. Food quality is a key
factor in disease prevention. Approaches which are striving
to be sustainable - such as organic farming- avoid hazardous
pesticide use and maintain nutrient balance. Consumers' understanding
of these facts will increase their willingness to pay prices
that reflect the true costs of production.
·
Foster an ethic of land stewardship and humanness in the
treatment of farm animals
Sustainable agriculture recognizes that the gifts of nature
upon which it depends- soil, water, plants, animals, both
wild and domestic- are to be treated with loving care and
humility. The greatest calling of the farmer is to leave those
gifts in better condition than when they were received. Such
a responsible agriculture can only be achieved when nature
is both mentor and model, and when natural systems are the
standard against which success is measured. Farm animals often
contribute to ecologically sound agricultural systems and
they deserve human care.
· Expand
knowledge access to information about sustainable agriculture.
American farmers are innovators. Given scientifically validated
techniques, farmers will adopt sustainable agricultural practices.
Seeing these practices in the field will speed adoption. We
need demonstration farms, farmer-to-farmer field tours, and
studies of alternative farms of all sizes. University teaching,
research, and extension must be redirected toward understanding
the whole farm ecology and away from chemical dependence in
farm management.
· Reform
the relationship among government, industry, and agriculture.
Government must use resources such as subsidies, grants, and
loans to convert significant portions of industrial agriculture
to a sustainable system. Undue rewards to concentrated interests
should be replaced with fair returns to farmers who sustainable
provide food and fiber.
·
Redefine the role of U.S. agriculture in the global community.
The present global agriculture trade is placing unnecessary
pressures on the sustainability of the earth's resource base.
The United States has a unique opportunity to change that
situation. The people of many other countries look to us for
agricultural leadership. We can honor that respect by restricting
our trade in dangerous substances. We can encourage the Agency
for International Development, The World Bank, and international
research institutions to convert to sustainable programs.
The international programs of universities can become centers
of sustainability training and research.
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