| Literature DB >> 33867585 |
Ken E Giller1, Renske Hijbeek1, Jens A Andersson1, James Sumberg2.
Abstract
Agriculture is in crisis. Soil health is collapsing. Biodiversity faces the sixth mass extinction. Crop yields are plateauing. Against this crisis narrative swells a clarion call for Regenerative Agriculture. But what is Regenerative Agriculture, and why is it gaining such prominence? Which problems does it solve, and how? Here we address these questions from an agronomic perspective. The term Regenerative Agriculture has actually been in use for some time, but there has been a resurgence of interest over the past 5 years. It is supported from what are often considered opposite poles of the debate on agriculture and food. Regenerative Agriculture has been promoted strongly by civil society and NGOs as well as by many of the major multi-national food companies. Many practices promoted as regenerative, including crop residue retention, cover cropping and reduced tillage are central to the canon of 'good agricultural practices', while others are contested and at best niche (e.g. permaculture, holistic grazing). Worryingly, these practices are generally promoted with little regard to context. Practices most often encouraged (such as no tillage, no pesticides or no external nutrient inputs) are unlikely to lead to the benefits claimed in all places. We argue that the resurgence of interest in Regenerative Agriculture represents a re-framing of what have been considered to be two contrasting approaches to agricultural futures, namely agroecology and sustainable intensification, under the same banner. This is more likely to confuse than to clarify the public debate. More importantly, it draws attention away from more fundamental challenges. We conclude by providing guidance for research agronomists who want to engage with Regenerative Agriculture.Entities:
Keywords: Sustainable intensification; agroecology; biodiversity; organic agriculture; soil health
Year: 2021 PMID: 33867585 PMCID: PMC8023280 DOI: 10.1177/0030727021998063
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Outlook Agric ISSN: 0030-7270 Impact factor: 1.877
Figure 1.Early theory of Regenerative Agriculture in developing countries. Source: Authors’ interpretation of Francis et al. (1986).
Figure 2.The frequency of key terms in books (3-year rolling averages). Source: Google NGram Viewer, Corpus ‘English 2019’ which includes books predominantly in the English language published in any country.
Figure 3.(a) Occurrence of Regenerative Agriculture or Regenerative Farming in news items and (b) Academic peer-reviewed publications on Regenerative Agriculture or Regenerative Farming. Sources: (a) Nexis Uni database, (b) Web of Science.
Figure 4.Regenerative Agriculture: Authors’ interpretation of the commonly used theory of change in 2021. Our analysis focuses on the lower blue box: ‘agronomic considerations’.
Agronomic principles and practices considered to be part of Regenerative Agriculture and their potential impacts on restoration of soil health and reversal of biodiversity loss.
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| Minimize tillage | Zero-till, reduced tillage, conservation agriculture, controlled traffic | *** | – |
| Maintain soil cover | Mulch, cover crops, permaculture | *** | * |
| Build soil C | Biochar, compost, green manures, animal manures | *** | – |
| Sequester carbon | Agroforestry, silvopasture, tree crops | *** | ** |
| Relying more on biological nutrient cycles | Animal manures, compost, compost tea, green manures and cover crops, maintain living roots in soil, inoculation of soils and composts, reduce reliance on mineral fertilizers, organic agriculture, permaculture | *** | – |
| Foster plant diversity | Diverse crop rotations, multi-species cover crops, agroforestry | ** | *** |
| Integrate livestock | Rotational grazing, holistic [Savory] grazing, pasture cropping, silvopasture | ** | ? |
| Avoid pesticides | Diverse crop rotations, multi-species cover crops, agroforestry | * | *** |
| Encouraging water percolation | Biochar, compost, green manures, animal manures, holistic [Savory] grazing | *** | – |
Based on McGuire (2018), Burgess et al. (2019) and Merfield (2019).