http://ecowatch.com/2015/01/06/regenerative-organic-agriculture/?utm_source=EcoWatch+List&utm_campaign=e8e02e04f6-Most_Read_Month_2_2_2014&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_49c7d43dc9-e8e02e04f6-85918417
[…]
Carbon Farming Defined
Carbon farming is an agricultural system implementing
practices that improve the rate at which CO2 is removed from the
atmosphere and converted to plant material and/or organic matter in the soil.
Today excess carbon is falling into our oceans and creating acidic conditions
that threaten plant and animal species. If we remove carbon from the atmosphere
and oceans by implementing the practices of regenerative organic agriculture,
we’ll sequester carbon into the soil and expand the soil’s water-holding
capacity. Building organic matter into the soil’s humus layer is essential for
growing the healthful foods humanity needs.
As a 2014 Rodale Institute report
states, “Organically managed soils can convert carbon CO2 from a greenhouse
gas into a food-producing asset.” Two major upsides to this approach are
drought-proof soils and, thanks to more nutrient-rich foods, reduced healthcare
costs.
If this is the first you’ve heard about this idea, it’s
because the good news is just starting to trickle out. For example, the Marin Carbon Project’s work
with compost and rangeland was recently featured on the cover of the San
Francisco Chronicle.
The mission of the Carbon Cycle Institute (part
of the Marin Carbon Project) is “to stop and reverse global warming by advancing
natural, science-based solutions that remove atmospheric carbon while promoting
environmental stewardship, social equity and economic sustainability.” The
institute is also focused on carbon-cycle literacy, a form of savvy still
greatly lacking in the general population, by educating and empowering people
to make more informed choices and to demand that elected officials do the same.
Recently the American Carbon Registry, a nonprofit
organization that creates protocols for carbon usage, approved standards that
would reward ranchers for land practices that sequester carbon. Rancher John
Wick, a Carbon Cycle Institute founder, has said, “Our proposal is that there
is a whole other paradigm—that agriculture practices can be . . . the art of
transforming atmospheric carbon into biospheric carbon.”
[…]
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