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Arable Farming
Cropping
Overthinking and overstating Regenerative Agriculture
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<blockquote data-quote="MrAgrologist" data-source="post: 7020297" data-attributes="member: 20242"><p>Absolutely spot on with these comments. Regen Ag was effectively practiced and dominated for years, along came population growth and it couldn’t keep pace with demand. Starvation threatened that drove innovation, entrepreneurs and scientists came together (as they always do) and industrial processes came up with solutions. As always you have to add context when considering and judging how the world has developed. The law of ‘the unintended consequence’ as always has its part to play which helps us refine a system and move on again. Today’s Regen[ATTACH=full]891582[/ATTACH][ATTACH=full]891583[/ATTACH] Ag should be allowed to be the hybrid of the system that was found wanting by way of not meeting demand (organic agriculture) with the intensive, industrialised systems that can meet demand but have far reaching unintended consequences by way of sustainability. This can and should still be based on sound science that can stand up to rigorous scrutiny and peer review.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="MrAgrologist, post: 7020297, member: 20242"] Absolutely spot on with these comments. Regen Ag was effectively practiced and dominated for years, along came population growth and it couldn’t keep pace with demand. Starvation threatened that drove innovation, entrepreneurs and scientists came together (as they always do) and industrial processes came up with solutions. As always you have to add context when considering and judging how the world has developed. The law of ‘the unintended consequence’ as always has its part to play which helps us refine a system and move on again. Today’s Regen[ATTACH=full]891582[/ATTACH][ATTACH=full]891583[/ATTACH] Ag should be allowed to be the hybrid of the system that was found wanting by way of not meeting demand (organic agriculture) with the intensive, industrialised systems that can meet demand but have far reaching unintended consequences by way of sustainability. This can and should still be based on sound science that can stand up to rigorous scrutiny and peer review. [/QUOTE]
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Overthinking and overstating Regenerative Agriculture
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