No-till agriculture and the deception of sustainability in Brazil

Agronomists and policy makers have proposed no-tillage practice and advocacy in the tropical savannah (Cerrado) of Brazil as a model for agriculture elsewhere. Building from intensive research with Embrapa and ethnographic research with two communities of transnational soy farmers, this paper explor...

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Main Authors: Andrew Ofstehage, Ryan Nehring
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2021-07-01
Series:International Journal of Agricultural Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14735903.2021.1910419
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author Andrew Ofstehage
Ryan Nehring
author_facet Andrew Ofstehage
Ryan Nehring
author_sort Andrew Ofstehage
collection DOAJ
description Agronomists and policy makers have proposed no-tillage practice and advocacy in the tropical savannah (Cerrado) of Brazil as a model for agriculture elsewhere. Building from intensive research with Embrapa and ethnographic research with two communities of transnational soy farmers, this paper explores the origins of no-tillage farming in the state of Paraná and the adoption and exploitation of no-tillage by large-scale farmers in the Cerrado of Brazil’s center-west. The spread of no-till was made possible by farmer innovation in Paraná, scientific research adapting the practice to the tropics, and and heavy application of chemical herbicides to control weeds without manual cultivation and intense soil fertility amendments in order to make the Cerrado productive for industrial agriculture. Small-scale Mennonites in the state of Goiás adopted it as an emergency measure to save their land base and compete with neighboring Brazilian farmers; large-scale family farmers from the U.S. adopted no-till to save on labor expense and reduce their liability in the face of labor laws. This indicates that while no-till in Brazil reduces soil erosion and is not a problem in itself, it emerges from a context of socio-technical fixes and its implementation supports farm profitability and agricultural expansion in the Cerrado.
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spelling doaj.art-6b5cf00ded3248edb829aee7ca86a0cf2023-09-20T10:18:00ZengTaylor & Francis GroupInternational Journal of Agricultural Sustainability1473-59031747-762X2021-07-01193-433534810.1080/14735903.2021.19104191910419No-till agriculture and the deception of sustainability in BrazilAndrew Ofstehage0Ryan Nehring1Cornell UniversityUniversity of CambridgeAgronomists and policy makers have proposed no-tillage practice and advocacy in the tropical savannah (Cerrado) of Brazil as a model for agriculture elsewhere. Building from intensive research with Embrapa and ethnographic research with two communities of transnational soy farmers, this paper explores the origins of no-tillage farming in the state of Paraná and the adoption and exploitation of no-tillage by large-scale farmers in the Cerrado of Brazil’s center-west. The spread of no-till was made possible by farmer innovation in Paraná, scientific research adapting the practice to the tropics, and and heavy application of chemical herbicides to control weeds without manual cultivation and intense soil fertility amendments in order to make the Cerrado productive for industrial agriculture. Small-scale Mennonites in the state of Goiás adopted it as an emergency measure to save their land base and compete with neighboring Brazilian farmers; large-scale family farmers from the U.S. adopted no-till to save on labor expense and reduce their liability in the face of labor laws. This indicates that while no-till in Brazil reduces soil erosion and is not a problem in itself, it emerges from a context of socio-technical fixes and its implementation supports farm profitability and agricultural expansion in the Cerrado.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14735903.2021.1910419no-tillageconservation tillagesoilpoliticssustainabilitytransnational farmersagronomycerradobrazil
spellingShingle Andrew Ofstehage
Ryan Nehring
No-till agriculture and the deception of sustainability in Brazil
International Journal of Agricultural Sustainability
no-tillage
conservation tillage
soil
politics
sustainability
transnational farmers
agronomy
cerrado
brazil
title No-till agriculture and the deception of sustainability in Brazil
title_full No-till agriculture and the deception of sustainability in Brazil
title_fullStr No-till agriculture and the deception of sustainability in Brazil
title_full_unstemmed No-till agriculture and the deception of sustainability in Brazil
title_short No-till agriculture and the deception of sustainability in Brazil
title_sort no till agriculture and the deception of sustainability in brazil
topic no-tillage
conservation tillage
soil
politics
sustainability
transnational farmers
agronomy
cerrado
brazil
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14735903.2021.1910419
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