When Benson Wanjala started farming in his western Kenya village two and a half decades ago, his 10-acre farm could produce a bountiful harvest of 200 bags of maize. That has dwindled to 30. He says his once fertile soil has become a nearly lifeless field that no longer earns him a living.

Like many other farmers, he blames acidifying fertilizers pushed in Kenya and other African countries in recent years. He said he started using the fertilizers to boost his yield and it worked — until it didn’t. Kenya’s government first introduced a fertilizer subsidy in 2008, making chemical fertilizers more accessible for smaller-scale farmers.

Problems with soil health are growing as the African continent struggles to feed itself. Africa has 65% of the world’s remaining uncultivated arable land but has spent about $60 billion annually to import food, according to the African Development Bank. The spending is estimated to jump to $110 billion by 2025 due to increased demand and changing consumption habits.

“Inorganic fertilizers were never meant to be the foundation of crop production,” he said, later adding that because of “commercially inclined farming, our soils are now poor, acidic, and low in biomass resources, and without life!”

  • Drusas@kbin.run
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    4 months ago

    When Benson Wanjala started farming in his western Kenya village two and a half decades ago, his 10-acre farm could produce a bountiful harvest of 200 bags of maize. That has dwindled to 30.

    Step 1 might be to not plant the same crop on the same land for two and a half decades straight.

    • stoly@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      The sort of work that is succeeding in parts of Africa, Pakistan, and India is setting up what they call food forests. Put some fruiting tree species in the center and surround throughout with fruiting and vegetable producing plants. This will form a more complex web of creatures that can live together and produce food for the people who take care of them. No fertilizers, no irrigation–just crops that are appropriate for the region. They can take years to get going, though, which is the hard part. Once they are going, it’s just a question of tending to them.

      • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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        4 months ago

        You also can’t really mechanise that, so forget about sending the kids to the city for high school. And it’s pretty much guarenteed you need to fertilise at least a bit to get the same yield, just by conservation of mass of P and N, assuming you’re harvesting from it.

        Contrary to popular opinion, farming is not simple or easy, and there’s actual reasons monoculture at scale is so popular.

        • stoly@lemmy.world
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          4 months ago

          This isn’t about trying to integrate with modern life. It’s realizing that aspects of modernity are obscene and some things should go back to how they were done millennia back.

          • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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            4 months ago

            Bro, how many cobs have you husked by hand? What about cotton balls carded, spun and woven? Grain reaped? I haven’t done much of those things, but enough to get that it sucks. And that’s not even going into the various things all those educated people in the the city make possible, like medicine so you don’t die at 5 from a bacterial infection.

            Assuming you’re in the US, why do you think illegal immigrants are the ones that work the fields? Unless you’re about to reveal you’re a rural Indian this is some seriously out of touch Marie Antoinette shit.

            • Corkyskog@sh.itjust.works
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              4 months ago

              I think they meant like around population centers to supplant regular food. But I don’t know where that would actually be…

              My crazy idea is Suburbia has a lot of lawn, and my dad showed me a garden can feed a family more than I would have thought. But who has time to do that? So you nake a law that you forfeit sections of your land, not x feet near your house if they have no existing agricultural or industrial activity for open planting, until at least the next season. Maintained lawns wouldn’t exist unless you were somewhere sufficiently rural.

              • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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                4 months ago

                Hopefully, otherwise they’re telling the starving African kids to go back to the stone age to save the environment, while they presumably stay somewhere air conditioned. The sad thing is that they probably don’t even realise how insulting that is.

                Densifying suburbs is a huge thing that needs to happen. It won’t change the world, because as big as suburbia is rural areas are bigger, but it will help. It also would do a lot to keep transport emissions down.

    • FinnFooted@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      Years ago I went to Kenya and Tanzania to asses some fields for trials of new cultivars my group was developing. There were a lot of issues with people seeing a yearly decrease in crop yield. But the major issue was actually the lack of crop rotation causing a buildup of disease in the soil which was weakening the plants each year.

      I don’t know this guy or his field. And, not carefully fertilizing fields can cause root burn for sure. But poor agricultural yield in Africa is definitely impacted by poor crop rotation.

      • KevonLooney@lemm.ee
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        4 months ago

        Wasn’t farming invented in Africa? Or at least the nearby Middle East. This has been a known issue for years.

        I bet it’s an issue with farmers needing money now, because of low crop prices. Crop prices are cyclical, so hopefully it works itself out without too much economic damage.