Nitrogen, Agrochemical Corporations, and International Trade: A Perilous Mix
Gilles Billen shows that industrial agriculture, propelled by international trade and specialization, has disturbed the nitrogen cycle. This has provoked the crossing of planetary boundaries and endangered the possibility of feeding the world. Alternatives do not require new technologies but different ways of organizing production and regional networks. Lynn Fries interviews Gilles Billen on GPEnewsdocs.
Please donate at theanalysis.news/donate/ - we can't do this without you.
Come visit us at theanalysis.news
Sign up for our newsletter: theanalysis.news/newsletter/
Like us on Facebook: / theanalysisnews-111882...
Follow us on:
Twitter: paul__jay?lang=en
Instagram: / theanalysis.news
Linkedin: / theanalysis-news
#PaulJay
#theanalysis
#climatechange
Пікірлер: 12
Gilles Billen shows that industrial agriculture, propelled by international trade and specialization, has disturbed the nitrogen cycle. This has provoked the crossing of planetary boundaries and endangered the possibility of feeding the world. Alternatives do not require new technologies but different ways of organizing production and regional networks. Lynn Fries interviews Gilles Billen on GPEnewsdocs.
One of the best and most important conversations ever on here
I've yet to be convinced that large scale organic farming would be better for the environment in the real world.
kzread.info/dash/bejne/nKqr0LGyiLfXdaQ.htmlsi=3uHC6-CD3IVIChkV&t=297
Soylent Green