[p2p-research] Fwd: ZNet Daily Commentary: Water Wisdom By Vandana Shiva
Michel Bauwens
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Mon Mar 15 06:17:32 CET 2010
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Subject: ZNet Daily Commentary: Water Wisdom By Vandana Shiva
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Water Wisdom
March 15, 2010 By *Vandana Shiva*
Vandana Shiva's ZSpace
Page<http://www.zcommunications.org/zspace/vandanashiva>/
ZSpace <http://www.zcommunications.org/zspace/>
Since 1966 - and as a consequence of the introduction of the Green
Revolution model of water-intensive, chemical farming - India has
over-exploited her groundwater, creating a water famine.
Intensification of drought, floods and cyclones is one of the predictable
impacts of climate change and climate instability. The failure of monsoon in
India, and the consequent drought, has impacted two-thirds of the country,
especially the breadbasket of India's fertile Gangetic plains. Bihar, for
example, has had a 43% rainfall deficit, and the story is the same in many
other parts of India.
In the final analysis, India's food security rests on the monsoon. Monsoon
failure and widespread drought imply a deepening of the already severe food
crisis triggered by trade-liberalisation policies, which have made India the
capital of hunger. They also imply a deepening of the water crisis.
The monsoons recharge the groundwater and surface-water systems. Since 1966,
as a consequence of the introduction of the Green Revolution model of
water-intensive chemical farming, India has over-exploited her groundwater,
creating a water famine. The chemical monocultures of the Green Revolution
use ten times more water than the biodiverse ecological farming systems.
In the 1970s, the World Bank gave massive loans to India to promote
groundwater mining. It forced states like Maharashtra to stop growing
water-prudent millets like jowar, which needs 300mm of water, and shift to
water-guzzling crops such as sugar cane, which needs 2,500mm of water. In a
region with 600mm of rainfall, this is a recipe for water famine.
A new study published in Nature magazine and led by Matthew Rodell of the
NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland shows that water levels in
North India fell by 40mm between August 2002 and August 2008. And over the
same period more than 109km3 of groundwater disappeared from aquifers, most
of it extracted for chemical, Green Revolution-style farming.
Not only has chemical agriculture mined groundwater, but it has also mined
soil fertility and contributed to climate change. Chemical fertilisers
destroy the living processes of the soil and make soils more vulnerable to
drought. Chemical fertilisers also produce nitrogen oxide, a greenhouse gas
300 times more potent than carbon dioxide.
The solution for the climate crisis, the food crisis and the water crisis is
the same: biodiversity-based, organic farming systems.
Biodiverse ecological farms address the climate crisis by reducing emissions
of greenhouse gases such as nitrogen oxide, and absorbing carbon dioxide in
plants and in the soil. Biodiversity and compost-rich soils are the most
effective carbon sinks. They also help adapt to climate change and drought
by increasing organic matter, which increases the moisture-holding capacity
of soil, and hence provides drought-proofing of agriculture.
Biodiverse organic farms increase food security by increasing the resilience
and reducing the climate vulnerability of farming systems. They also enhance
food security because they have a higher production of food and nutrition
per acre than Green Revolution monocultures, which measure the yield of a
cash-crop commodity, not the total food output, nor the nutritional quality
of that food.
Biodiverse organic systems also address the water crisis. Firstly,
production based on water-prudent crops such as millets reduces water
demand. Secondly, organic systems use ten times less water than chemical
systems. Thirdly, by transforming the soil into a water reservoir by
increasing its organic matter content, biodiverse organic systems reduce
irrigation demand and help conserve water in agriculture.
Maximising biodiversity and organic matter in the soil thus simultaneously
increases climate resilience, food security and water security.
However, the dominant paradigm of agriculture based on the Green Revolution
and genetic engineering is based on reducing biodiversity and reducing
organic matter to promote monocultures based on intensive inputs of
chemicals, water and fossil fuels. And as the multiple crises deepen because
of these non-sustainable practices, corporations try and transform the
crisis into new business and marketing opportunities. Examples include the
patenting of climate-resilient traits that farmers have evolved over
centuries and projecting this biopiracy as an ‘invention'.
In a recent article published in the Wall Street Journal, ‘Fight Droughts
with Science', Henry I. Miller, co-author of The Frankenfood Myth, stated:
"The first drought-resistant crop, maize, is expected to be commercialised
by 2012. If field testing goes well, India would be a potential market for
this variety." What Miller fails to mention is that India already has
hundreds of thousands of drought-resistant crops.
These are the crops farmers are growing in times of drought. While
cultivation of rice has gone down from 25.673 million ha to 19.13 million
ha, the area under water-prudent drought-resistant nutritious crops has gone
up from 15.325 million to 15.956 million ha. The biotechnology industry is
clearly a laggard in breeding for drought resistance, compared to centuries
of breeding by India's farmers. Miller also fails to mention that the
genetically engineered drought-resistant maize seed performs badly in normal
years. This is not science.
Another example of corporate opportunism in this period of drought is the
pushing of Roundup (a broad-spectrum herbicide). Roundup kills everything
green other than one single crop and therefore destroys the biodiversity and
organic matter that is needed to promote climate resilience, conserve water
and increase food production.
It is vital that the government of India does not use this emergency of
drought to act as a marketer of GM seeds and Roundup. The alternative is
clear. It involves:
1. Conservation and large-scale distribution of the seeds of water-prudent
crops.
2. The promotion of organic agriculture to increase climate resilience and
food and water security.
3. Incentives to farmers to encourage a shift from water-guzzling Green
Revolution agriculture to water-conserving biodiverse organic agriculture.
Farmers did not create the Green Revolution. They should not be punished for
its consequences.
Vandana Shiva is an Indian feminist and environmental activist. She is the
founder/director of Navdanya Research Foundation for Science, Technology,
and Ecology.
Source: Resurgence
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*From:* Z Net - The Spirit Of Resistance Lives<http://www.zcommunications.org/>
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