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Organic farming and world hunger

Organic farming uses traditional methods such as green manuring, biological pest control, composting, ridge tilling and crop rotation rather than synthetic chemicals or genetically modified (GMO) seeds to produce food. Simply put, organic farming can prevent world hunger because it has the capacity to achieve high food yields in impoverished areas with low financial investment. Organic farming is efficient, cost-effective and affordable for farmers in developing nations. It also provides more jobs and leads to self-sufficiency.

Using green manure is a simple and cheap way for farmers in developing countries to improve their soil. Green manure is actually a cover crop planted as seeds to increase the nutrients and organic matter of soil. Some examples of green manure are clover, vetch, alfalfa, buckwheat, mustard, fenugreek, lupin, oats and rye. The aim is to improve and protect the soil by growing green manure and then plowing it under. Increasing organic matter, or biomass, leads to better water retention and aeration. Green manure also suppresses weed growth, soil erosion and compaction. Another advantage of green manure is that it can be used as forage for pollinators, whose free services are vital in the production of most vegetables and fruits. Animal manure from livestock can also be used in organic farming, but there is always a danger of transmitting pathogens like E. coli to food if it is not properly composted.

Despite the claims of those who support conventional chemical-intensive farming or GMO farming that growth hormones, synthetic pesticides, and food irradiation are all necessary to produce sufficient crops, a number of recent studies indicate that organic farming can produce more food for the world's poor. Encouraging farmers in poor nations to use traditional organic methods can lead to higher crop yields of 70% or more. These methods are also better for wildlife, water quality, air quality and food safety. In contrast, chemical-intensive agriculture inevitably leads to loss of topsoil, a decrease in soil fertility, water contamination and loss of genetic diversity.

The problem with underlying world hunger is not that there is not enough food or land for everyone on the planet. Rather, the problem lies in suboptimal food distribution methods, poor farming techniques, and such factors as political corruption, civil wars and droughts, particularly in Africa. Sustainable organic farming reduces or eliminates the need to buy expensive imported


Below are the top articles rated and ranked by Helium members on:

Organic farming and world hunger

  • 1 of 7

    by Colette Georgii

    How organic sustainable farming can stop world hunger

    Our grandfathers before World War II were natural farmers. Natural farming

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  • 2 of 7

    by EMoore

    Farming witout injuring the soil for future generations is what organic farming is all about. Organic farming is simply using

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  • 3 of 7

    by Vernon Huffman

    Organic Farming is not earth-shattering new science. A couple of generations ago, farmers everywhere called it "common sense."

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  • 4 of 7

    by Ardeth Baxter

    Organic farming uses traditional methods such as green manuring, biological pest control, composting, ridge tilling and crop

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  • 5 of 7

    by David Moreland

    Conventional wisdom says that modern agriculture has dramatically increased food production through extensive use of chemical

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Organic farming and world hunger

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