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‘Regenerative agriculture’ is all the rage – but it’s not going to fix our food system

Decades of industrial agriculture have caused environmental and social damage across the globe. Soils have deteriorated and plant and animal species are disappearing. Regenerative agriculture is one alternative creating a lot of buzz, especially in rich, industrially developed countries.  The term “regenerative agriculture” was coined in the 1970s. It’s generally understood to mean farming that improves, rather than degrades,…

Written by

Anja Bless

Originally Published in

Decades of industrial agriculture have caused environmental and social damage across the globe. Soils have deteriorated and plant and animal species are disappearing. Regenerative agriculture is one alternative creating a lot of buzz, especially in rich, industrially developed countries.  The term “regenerative agriculture” was coined in the 1970s. It’s generally understood to mean farming that improves, rather than degrades, landscape and ecological processes such as water, nutrient and carbon cycles.  Despite regenerative agriculture’s popularity and its focus on sustainable food production, it fails to tackle systemic social and political issues. As a result, the movement may perpetuate business-as-usual in the food system, rather than transform it.  Agroecology combines agronomy (agricultural science) and ecology, and also seeks to address injustice and inequity in food systems.  The movement is associated with the world’s largest smallholder farmer organisation, La Via Campesina, and has been endorsed by the United Nations.  Agroecology advocates for Indigenous knowledge and land rights, and support for small-scale farmers. It seeks to challenge neoliberalism, corporate dominance, and globalisation of food systems.