Community | July 13, 2010 | 15 comments

The escalating chemical war on weeds and the return of Agent Orange to your fields

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JanforGore
A few weeks back, the New York Times made mention of an astounding development, which has, for whatever reason, received little fanfare or recognition. Despite its Vietnam War notoriety, Agent Orange is in vogue again, this time down on the farm. Its reemergence, and in this particular setting, raises a host of troubling questions that are not being well considered.

Over the past year, there have been increasing reports of emerging superweeds resistant to Roundup, the preferred weedkiller of America’s farmers. Roundup is sold in tandem with Roundup-ready seeds, both marquee products of the Monsanto Corporation. In the 1990s, when the latter product hit the market, it was momentous, revolutionary – a godsend: Roundup-ready seeds are genetically designed to resist application of the potent herbicide. By sowing Roundup-ready seeds and dousing their fields with the trademark weedkiller, farmers could forego the expense and toil of tilling the land, and losing valuable topsoil in the process. Production was enhanced, time and money saved. It was quite an economic boon to farmers, at least in the short run. Environmentalists were also pleased in light of the topsoil angle. Needless to say, Monsanto was thrilled that farmers were even more dependent on its products.

But for years critics ominously warned that, as is the nature of ‘nature,’ weeds would eventually evolve to withstand Roundup. Monsanto brushed aside such concerns, saying it would be ages before anyone had to worry about something like that. The glory days lasted about a decade. The superweeds evolved faster than anyone imagined-- and with a vengeance. Farmers accustomed to drenching their fields with Roundup are now battling a monster breed of pigweed that, the New York Times reports, “can grow three inches a day and reach seven feet or more…so sturdy that it can damage harvesting equipment.”

Nature has issued quite a challenge to our ‘weed solution.’ The chemical industry has decided to respond in turn with Agent Orange. To be precise, Dow Chemical is working on seeds that are resistant to 24-D, a component of Agent Orange… presumably because it intends on spraying farmland with wartime defoliant.

This is alarming on a number of fronts. But let’s be clear on one thing at the outset: we don’t necessarily need Agent Orange to deal with weeds. The Amish don’t. Never have. Superweeds-- like superbugs (or superbacteria) emerging in concentrated chicken farms-- are the product of industrial agriculture, which aims to squeeze as much as possible from the land, and has selected monoculture as the optimal means of doing so. Grow one crop, in great density, on huge tracts of land, demanding tremendous output. Hence the Iowa corn fields, which stretch as far as the eye can see. There’s only one problem with this: nature does not ‘farm’ this way. Monoculture is highly vulnerable to pests, disease and weeds. In monocultivated fields, predators find a vast pool of identical, fat, helpless victims. In contrast, nature ‘farms’ a diversity of crops amidst one another, which do not succumb en masse to any given plague.

We have insisted on monoculture in order to produce as much as possible. Today, we’re able to extract 6 times more corn from an acre of land than 100 years ago. Industrial agriculture is to be commended for that impressive efficiency. And I know how its apologists – Dow and Monsanto included-- would defend the institution and its manic drive for production. Industrial agriculture is necessary, they would say, to feed the world: you can’t feed upwards of six billion people by farming like the Amish.

Though I am not qualified to contest this claim fully, I can think of one important fact that casts doubt upon it. In this country, industrial agriculture’s immense bounty has wrought skyrocketing rates of obesity, heart disease, diabetes. Agribusiness has not exactly harnessed its awesome technological advances to feed the world, but rather, to cram as many excess calories as possible into citizens of the industrial world. In particular, its bounty has subsidized a profusion of cheap fast and processed foods. Indeed, two of Monsanto’s most popular Round-up ready products are corn and soy, the building blocks of our processed foods.

So, it seems clear, at least in the US, industrial agriculture can step off the gas pedal. We could use an Amish revolution across the farm belt. If we adopted Amish style polyculture, our farms might well produce less. But would that be such a bad thing? Polyculture would certainly produce less of the staple commodities, corn and soy, and less processed food in turn. It would make for a healthier—lighter-- nation.

But we cannot settle for less. We must have more.

We’re so hell-bent on maintaining our voracious consumption habits, that we’ll engage the services of the defense industry. We’ll use Agent Orange to fight off weeds and ensure the delivery of cheap corn to Frito-Lay, Coke and Kelloggs; and when megaweeds evolve to withstand Agent Orange—eighteen-foot-tall weeds, stems like tree trunks—we’ll reach for the napalm. ‘Napalm-ready’ soy; that’s our future.

All in the name of productivity, efficiency, convenience-- profit. For you see, farming as nature ordains it fails on all fronts. Nature does not cut it in the USA.

We think nothing of wantonly poisoning the land on which we depend for sustenance. We have gravely degraded the rich topsoil of the Prairies, much of which has flowed down the Mississippi into the Gulf of Mexico (and is now covered in a slick of oil, I presume). Our herbicides, pesticides and fungicides have stripped the land of natural nutrients, which we aim to supply in chemical doses. And when agricultural problems arise-- problems that are the product of our industrial, chemical practices-- we administer more of the same. Actually, I’m wrong: in the case of Agent Orange, we administer stronger poisons, as if we aim to twist Nature’s arm—as if we could. As if we could subdue her, and force her to do our bidding: ‘You WILL give us Cheetoes at 20 cents to the pound-- or else!’

It is of course hubris. Not to mention tremendously short-sighted. What do we think, soaking the fields in Agent Orange? Surely, Dow must know that the very application of this chemical in strong, widespread and longterm doses is precisely the doom of this product: these are the very conditions that encourage—dare!-- superweeds to evolve. So what are the chemical companies playing at? What’s the game plan? Do they intend to graduate to ever more potent and dangerous herbicides? Surely that can’t be sustainable. Or do they hope to mix and match chemical herbicides, to keep the weeds off balance? That seems marginally safer, at best. And does anyone know how these chemicals fare in the environment, once combined, over the course of years? Or is Dow simply aiming for Monsanto’s promised land, an herbicide-seed combination that will corner the market, and inflate company stock in the short run?

Besides the fact that we would use these chilling chemicals in the production of our food, no less. Agent Orange is accused of having caused birth defects in Vietnam, and increased rates of cancer among American veterans of the war there. Dow has disputed these claims. And yet, in light of Agent Orange’s reputation, it is surprising that Dow would press on with its use in food production nonetheless. This shows tremendous gall. Or shocking disrespect for the consumer.

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15 comments // The escalating chemical war on weeds and the return of Agent Orange to your fields

  • Incredulous
  • artemis6
  • Incredulous
    • +4
      Incredulous  
    • Great post, and while Dow may dispute the connections between Agent Orange and cancer, apparently the connection has been established well enough that the Federal government now pays out disability benefits to veterans who were exposed to Agent Orange and subsequently got sick and/or died from Lou Gehrig's disease (ALS).

      The Federal government does not readily make known that it pays these benefits, not well publicized, almost an insider information sort of deal, but it's real.

      http://neurotalk.psychcentral.com/thread50099.html

    • 2 years ago
  • hombre76
    • +2
      hombre76  
    • want a sollution to the pessticides and over use of land and even massive cuts to the cost of shipping said produce to market?.....Look into highrise agriculture.....Ill leaveit to you to develope as I am trying to get a business plan together my self.

    • 2 years ago
  • ampersand
    • +2
      ampersand  
    • hombre76:

      Fresh thinking about solutions is always a good thing and I appreciate your reference to high-rise agriculture. But, as an architect, and to some small degree, a grower, it seems to me that that type of high-cost, high-tech solution will in the end drive up costs and only perpetuate the central core issue of the problem.

      If one lives in Singapore, where arable land is non-existent, skyscraper food production does make good sense. In almost every other temperate area of the world, not so much.

      If we want to depend on concentrated capital to provide food for increasing billions of human population, high-rise food production, and synthetic food, are probably the answer.

      To my mind, that hasn't worked out so well so far, but I try to keep an open mind about innovation from any direction. I'm sure there are benefits from concentrated capital food production, however, I myself suspect this is not one of them.
      I think greenhouse food production in appropriate scale is wonderful.
      You can protect plants for the vagaries of weather and give them more intense care.
      Using ascending racks, and possibly even hydroponic or aerobic cultures, can be a good thing in the appropriate scale. It comes down in last analysis to the full cost (including the externalities) and what needs to be achieved, and will be, by the method.

      By all means, use the top few floors of urban skyscrapers for food production.
      However, the idea of purpose built, stand alone high-rises for food production would require massive capital and put the food it produced solely in the hands of major corporations to serve a massively expanding population.
      It just doesn't seem like a good idea.
      I recommend that you keep in mind localism and scale if you want to preserve a sane and humane future; and giganticism, if you want to destroy it.

    • 2 years ago
  • treewolf39
    • +1
      treewolf39  
    • ampersand:

      I like the idea of all roof tops and your idea of the top two floors. People can find immense freedom and satisfaction in growing even a small herb garden or their own tomato plant.

    • 2 years ago
  • hombre76
    • +1
      hombre76  
    • ampersand:

      OK here it is in a nut shell the produce production is already corporate owned these buildings do have architectural sound foundation and technologies that can fill all floors with natural sunlight (look up Light chimneys) this reduces the cost of producing light for plant growth one of the most often cited cost criticisms of high rise agriculture and if these structures are built in all cities and towns of say in the US then the cost of bringing this food to a market becomes nil. also there are the means of water recapture as well as gas capture both from out side in the form of CO2 capture and feeding to plants and as Oxygen capture and release to the atmosphere. No need for pest control and we can grow year round. Also the land we used to use for farming can be opened up those who wish to still grow on their land can but must do it organically or not at all the vast majority should either be bought or managed through grants from the government as wild lands and allowed to resow with prairie grass a great bio fuel crop and then I propose that we reintroduce Bison to this area along with the many other native species . this in turn allows us to create an industry of meat production through hunting groups that can help maintain a healthy heard size (historically in the Billions) that once inhabited that area in numbers large enough to feed a nation even as large as ours. the opening of this land will help reduce overall the need to crowd our livestock as a whole for all regions that employ this agricultural technique. Now as you can see I have many Ideas that stretch far into a remaking of this great country and even this continent and perhaps the world. While I am a gardener myself I was not always with much appropriation or even ability or access to grow anything. I defiantly hope that once the tech is developed that individuals may see the benefit of producing their own food as much for the satisfaction it brings as well as the lower financial burden. that said I do not believe that we all want or can be personal farmers and that to enact the level of change I wish to see this is the best vehicle for that. currently there are millions of people starving around the world for many reasons but chief among them is cost of delivery and cost of creating sustainable crops in often times unsuitable places this solution in my opinion produces an incentive to outside money to invest in a product they know the people of that region can afford and will buy with regularity.

    • 2 years ago
  • schobiz
    • +1
      schobiz  
    • It's going to come down to our ability to organize ourselves and create policy change. Even if you spend your money on top dollar organics and locally produced foods, the farmer who brought that to you is probably still barely making it, even while charging a high premium for the product. Terribly disheartening, though I live in the Bay Area where year round organic, local produce and animal protein is available.

    • 2 years ago
  • mindcruzer
  • JanforGore
  • ampersand
    • +2
      ampersand  
    • Great and informative post, as always.
      In my area, (which is renowned worldwide for it "pristine" beauty), over 50% of the plants now are non-native and the primary fight with the landscape is with a gaggle of ferociously invasive species becoming dominant.
      I carry that fight on all by hand and try and develop strategies for being most effective and letting nature help me do it. It's quite a struggle, but perhaps if everyone were involved consciously, over a generation, we could do it.
      At the core of this problem in every instance is man.
      Invariably being uninformed, or reckless, or just plain stupid in his thrashing about the landscape chewing up the scenery.
      As the major agri-chemical companies continue to wage war on the ecosystem I wonder how the ecosystem will retaliate and whether it has any substantive human allies to aid in that fight.

    • 2 years ago
  • JanforGore
    • +2
      JanforGore  
    • ampersand:

      These superweeds are nature's way of fighting back at those who would deign to know more about nature than nature does. They are a warning that these companies refuse to heed, as this article points out, to the point where actually dropping napalm doesn't seem out of character if it would bring them profit. We indeed are our own worst enemy.

    • 2 years ago
  • misfit20
    • +1
      misfit20  
    • The saddest part about this is that Americans are so apathetic, they will do nothing to resist this, hell, they might beg Monsanto to spray Agent Orange, to benefit the economy of course. Who dares oppose the great Monsanto?

    • 2 years ago
  • JanforGore
  • JanforGore
    • +7
      JanforGore  
    • Who would have thought that the very companies that killed and maimed people and nature with their wartime toxic concoctions would actually wind up pouring them on the food you eat and daring to call that sustainable agriculture!? This is nothing more than a government sanctioned poisoning of our population. Do you recall having any voice in what these companies would get to spray on the food you buy and consume? American farmers, stand up for yourselves and the people! BOYCOTT these poisons and use true sustainable agriculture techniques that replenish soil nutrients, sequester carbon, conserve water, decrease carbon/fossil fuel emissions, and bring us healthier food. It isn't just the Gulf of Mexico that is one big dead zone.... every major waterway in this country is poisoned to some extent with these toxic concoctions while they run smiling to the bank as your healthcare costs rise along with the death of biodiversity in a monoculture world.THEY MUST BE STOPPED.

    • 2 years ago
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