If you think agriculture is broken, read this book

Posted By : Telegraf
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Books bashing Big Ag have become as common as cockroaches. Books applauding it are as rare as 600-bushel corn yields, which is to say almost non-existent.

Almost, but not quite. One grower – David Hula of Charles City, Virginia – has hit the 600 mark, scoring a verified 616.2 bushels per acre in 2019. And one author, Harvard professor Robert Paarlberg, has written in praise of large-scale commercial farming, most recently in his latest book titled Resetting the Table: Straight Talk About the Food We Grow and Eat.

Photo: Urban Lehner

Paarlberg’s publisher describes the book as a “bold, science-based corrective to the groundswell of misinformation about food and how it’s produced.” Much of this corrective validates modern industrial farming.

To the oft-heard charge that Big Ag is ruining Americans’ health, Paarlberg’s verdict is: Not guilty. It’s not what farmers grow that has made Americans obese and diabetic, he says; it’s what Big Food does with what farmers grow, turning it into addictive products that are high in calories, sugar and sodium but low in nutrition. He doesn’t understand how justifiable criticism of Big Food has slithered into unjustifiable criticism of Big Ag.

To a second charge, that Big Ag is spoiling the environment, Paarlberg offers a more nuanced defense, starting with ag’s improved performance in recent decades. “Modern farming protects the environment not only by using less land compared to several decades ago; it also uses less water, less fossil energy and fewer chemicals for every bushel produced.” With increased use of precision ag techniques, he argues, it will do still better in the future.

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