Rodale Institute to Launch Much-Anticipated Regenerative Organic Label

Author: Emily Monaco | Published: March 7, 2018

The Rodale Institute plans to unveil its new Regenerative Organic Certification (ROC) at this week’s Natural Products Expo West trade show in Anaheim, California. ROC was developed by the Regenerative Organic Alliance, a coalition of organizations and businesses led by the Rodale Institute and spearheaded by brands like Patagonia and Dr. Bronner’s.

The USDA organic standard is the “bedrock” of the new certification, notes a recent press release. Only USDA farms and ranches that have already achieved the organic certification will be eligible for ROC, which boasts higher-bar standards for soil health, ecological management, animal welfare, and fairness for farmers and workers.

“I don’t think it’s going to replace organic, that’s not our goal, but rather to build on it,” says Jeff Moyer, Executive Director of the Rodale Institute.

The Alliance recognizes standards such as Global Animal Partnership, Animal Welfare Approved, Certified Humane, Fair for Life, Fairtrade International, Agricultural Justice Project, and multiple others, and many of the policies covered by these certification programs have been incorporated into the ROC standard.

“By already having some these certifications, farmers, and ranchers will be on their way to achieve ROC certification,” explains an Alliance rep.

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A Secret Superpower, Right in Your Backyard

Author: Kendra Pierre-Louis | Published: March 6, 2018

As the verdant hills of Wakanda are secretly enriched with the fictional metal vibranium in “Black Panther,” your average backyard also has hidden superpowers: Its soil can absorb and store a significant amount of carbon from the air, unexpectedly making such green spaces an important asset in the battle against climate change.

Backyard soils can lock in more planet-warming carbon emissions than soils found in native grasslands or urban forests like arboretums, according to Carly Ziter, a Ph.D. candidate at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

The results of her research, published Tuesday in the journal Ecological Applications, were something of a surprise, given that those of us who have yards generally don’t think of them as “nature,” or as especially beneficial to the environment. But at least in this case, the things we enjoy for ourselves are also helping the community at large.

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Regeneration Project Granada – a New Approach to Migration

Author: Sam Allen | Published: March 1, 2018

I am part of a group of 12 people living in the village of Saleres, Valle de Lecrín, close to Granada in Spain. We come from Europe, West Africa, South America and the Middle East. Some of us are called refugees, others expats, some locals, others migrants and some foreigners. We have a diversity of identities, legal statuses and professional trainings. Some of us are religious, queer, wealthy, poor, some of us speak many languages and others are learning to speak Spanish for the first time. What brings us together is a common willingness to co-create (and practice) a shared vision around three core values;

  • integration
  • sustainability
  • regeneration

For the last year and a half we’ve been setting up a project while living and working as a collective that celebrates its diversity.

I am still navigating how to talk about Regeneration Project Granada without succumbing to the simplified version ‘it’s a project with migrants and refugees’; because in reality it’s much more than that – it’s a project about people learning to live in response to the particular time and place they find themselves in.

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Regenerating Soil Can Double Corn Farmers’ Incomes

Author: Emma Bryce | Published: March 2, 2018

Farming sustainably isn’t just good for the planet: if it’s done right it can double profits too, finds a new study published in PeerJBut this requires a paradigm shift that champions crop diversity over monoculture, and quality over quantity–a way of growing food that’s known as ‘regenerative agriculture’.

Currently in the United States and many other countries, farming is characterised by monoculture, heavy pesticide use, and tillage to rid the soil of weeds. These contribute in different ways to several environmental ills–such as climate change, water and soil pollution, and the quashing of biodiversity. A fraction of farmers practice regenerative methods, designed to boost biodiversity and increase soil nutrients by reducing tillage, planting cover crops on exposed soil, enabling livestock to graze amongst crops, and cutting out pesticides.

But little has been done to explore whether the perceived benefits of these regenerative methods really stand up to the test.

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Con espectroscopia detectan insectos en suelos cultivados

Publicado: 4 de marzo 2018

Diez muestras se tomaron de cada uno de los siete cultivos las cuales se analizaron en el Laboratorio de Suelos de la Facultad de Ciencias de la Universidad Nacional de Colombia.

Mediante el método de espectroscopia infrarroja se evidenció la presencia de cochinilla, o perla de tierra colombiana (Eurhizococcus colombianus), en cultivos de mora en siete municipios y un corregimiento de Antioquia.

Por irradiación, la espectroscopia infrarroja permite detectar vibraciones moleculares de una amplia gama de compuestos orgánicos presentes en una muestra. Las oscilaciones tienen características peculiares, por lo que se pueden comparar con una huella digital, y son representadas mediante un gráfico conocido como espectro.

Esta técnica se utilizó para analizar muestras de cultivos de mora de siete fincas de Envigado, El Retiro, Granada, Guarne, La Ceja, La Unión y San Vicente (en el Oriente antioqueño) y en el corregimiento Santa Elena de Medellín.

El estudio se hizo tanto para plantaciones sanas como afectadas por la cochinilla, la cual habita en suelos, se alimenta de raíces de plantas de diferentes cultivos y ha sido registrada como plaga desde hace cerca de 30 años, por afectar el desempeño de los cultivos de mora, especialmente, uno de los más importantes en las zonas altoandinas de Colombia.

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Desafíos feministas para enfrentar el conflicto del capital contra la vida

Publicado: 2 de febrero 2018

A lo largo del continente americano las mujeres tejen experiencias de resistencia en el territorio a partir de la lógica de la vida pese a la ofensiva de la lógica del capital.

La presencia masiva de las mujeres en las luchas populares, la visibilidad y la fuerza de la agenda feminista son marcas del período reciente de las resistencias y movilizaciones en todo el continente. En las luchas feministas por justicia, igualdad y libertad, las exigencias de fin del patriarcado, del racismo y del capitalismo son imbricadas, desde una mirada crítica al colonialismo y a la heteronormatividad.

La ofensiva neoliberal que enfrentamos hoy en todo el continente es una reacción a un período de cambios y ampliación de derechos. Es una ofensiva extremadamente violenta, que ataca a los cuerpos, los territorios y las condiciones de producción del vivir. Ataca, al mismo tiempo, la democracia y da un nuevo impulso a los procesos de expoliación, mercantilización y militarización. El resultado es la ampliación del alcance del control y dominio de las élites detenedoras del poder económico sobre la vida de los pueblos.

Esa ofensiva plantea para los movimientos sociales y las fuerzas políticas de la izquierda en general, anti-capitalistas en particular, el desafío de construir otro nivel de rearticulación y construcción de procesos organizativos, acciones y luchas concretas.

La Marcha Mundial de las Mujeres es activa en esos procesos de construcción de alianzas y luchas comunes. La lucha contra el neoliberalismo es central en nuestra agenda, y combina la resistencia al poder de las corporaciones transnacionales, a las políticas de ayuste, la militarización y los acuerdos de comercio e inversiones. Esos enfrentamientos son inseparables de la lucha por la democracia, la autodeterminación, la integración y soberanía de los pueblos. Todas esas son luchas feministas.

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Revisión del uso de microorganismos para sanidad vegetal en agricultura protegida

Publicado: 2 de marzo 2018

Con la promesa de acceder a alimentos sin contaminantes, la lucha contra las plagas y enfermedades toma como herramienta la producción masiva de los microorganismos del suelo.

La aparición en el mercado de productos microbiológicos genera gran incertidumbreentre los encargados de velar por la salud de los cultivos. Los prescriptores encuentran un gran vacío de información en cuanto a las garantías exigibles a los productos fitosanitarios y sus condiciones de empleo. Por otro lado los productores se muestran reacios a su uso por la falta de información. Estas necesidades, y otras que están por venir, motivó a la formalización del Seminario de Agroecología en la Universidad de Almería.

La lucha contra las plagas y enfermedades tienen como herramienta la producción masiva de los microorganismos del suelo. Desde hace un tiempo vuelve a enfatizarse esta línea y se ha convertido en objeto de la producción agraria mundial bajo la premisa establecida por la cual los consumidores desean acceder a alimentos sin contaminantes (químicos o microbiológicos). No sólo se plantea el empleo de microorganismos, también el empleo de sustancias de origen alimentario que pueden presentar aplicación en la gestión de la sanidad vegetal.

Dificultades
A lo largo de esta reflexión podremos analizar las dificultades que se presentan antes de que un tratamiento con microorganismos sea eficaz en el control de una plaga o una enfermedad de un cultivo. Los microorganismos capaces de competir con la especie que causa una enfermedad en el cultivo viven en el suelo fértil. Desde principios de la última década del S.XX se aborda el estudio del suelo como ente vivo y se trabaja en rediseñar los sistemas de producción para que sean capaces de mantenerse sanos.

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Regenerative Farming Starts Here—with Chickens

Are you ready to say goodbye to the monocrop industrial approach to agriculture and hello to regenerative farming?

Check out this Main Street Project video which tells a story about restoring our land and our relationship with plants and animals, and valuing the power of small farmers—all while deploying a small-scale system that is “accessible, productive and economically viable.”

How does the Main Street Project do all that? As the makers of this video explain, “the path to healing our food and agriculture system is a path walked on by chickens.” That’s right. Main Street Project has developed a poultry-centered regenerative agriculture system that can change how food is produced around the world.

Well-managed paddocks and rotational grazing—practices that regenerate soil, eliminate erosion and increase production—play a big role in Main Street’s well-planned 100-acre farm ecosystem in Northfield, Minnesota.

According to the video, chickens “contribute to the farm ecosystem by providing an affordable entry point for long-term economic investment and help transform that investment into a wide array of marketable products,” all while contributing to a “vibrant farm economy.”

Main Street Project’s goal is to provide a “revolutionary approach to eliminating harmful practices in the poultry industry while healing the land and relationship to the labor force.” The project’s founders want to solve the nation’s food crisis by equipping and uplifting the “next generation of consumers, farmers and investors in regenerative agriculture practices.”

Main Street Project’s Reginaldo Haslett-Marroquin describes the project’s approach:

“We are advocating for a farming approach that brings back ancient knowledge, wisdom and techniques that farmers have survived on for a long time. What we are doing is restructuring those techniques so we can meet current demands in a way that the farming system that we deploy is good for the people, good for the landscape and the ecology, and is good for the economy.”

It’s part of the project’s “ecological, economic and social triple bottom line.” And the beauty of it is that the regenerative-poultry and grain model can be adapted to different climates in different parts of the U.S and the world. And it can operate on a small scale, or can be scaled up to meet the growing demand  for organic, regenerative poultry.

If a lot of this sounds familiar, it’s because of the steady drumbeat led by Regeneration International (RI), which works to build a “healthy global ecosystem in which regenerative agriculture and land-use practices cool the planet, feed the world, and promote public health, prosperity and peace.”

As Organic Consumers Association’s International Director Ronnie Cummins explains in a recent blog post, the regeneration movement is “the one movement that we believe has the power to address all our individual and collective concerns, the movement that holds the most hope for resolving the multiple and deepening global crises of hunger, poverty, crumbling political systems and climate change. The movement that begins with healing our most critical resources—soil, water, air—through better farming and land management practices. And ends with healing our local communities and global societies and restoring climate stability.”

Want to get involved? Help us rapidly scale up the signatories of Regeneration International’s 4 per 1000 initiative, which calls for countries to draw down more carbon than they emit, and to store it in the soil. Connect us with your local farmers, NGOs, agencies and companies that would be interested in signing on.

Increasing the number of those committed to healthy soil is the first step toward building a regeneration movement in your community.

Sign up here to keep up with news and alerts from Organic Consumers Association. Posted in full with permission.

‘The Dirt Cure:’ Why Human Health Depends on Soil Health

Author: Julie Wilson | Published: February 28, 2018

Our connection to nature is sacred, dating back to the beginning of our existence. It’s no wonder then that our health is intimately intertwined with the Earth—from the soil beneath our feet, to the food we eat, to the water we drink and to the air that fills our lungs.

In other words, nature determines our health, upon which much of our wellbeing—and even our happiness—depends.

This philosophy is the foundation for Dr. Maya Shetreat-Klein’s book, “The Dirt Cure: Growing Healthy Kids with Food Straight from Soil.” Dr. Shetreat-Klein is a pediatric neurologist, herbalist, naturalist and urban farmer based in New York City, where she raises chickens (a lifelong dream) and grows organic fruits and vegetables.

Her New York Times bestselling book has been translated into 10 languages.

I was fortunate to meet Shetreat-Klein a few weeks ago in Houston, Texas, where she was spoke at an event co-hosted by the Organic Consumers Association and the Organic Horticulture Benefits Alliance, a non-profit that educates individuals, gardeners, homeowners, landscapers and schools on the real-world application and benefits of organics.

Shetreat-Klein described her residency as a medical student and the complete lack of emphasis on nutrition and whole-body health. As a young medical student she was appalled to learn that it was the norm to prescribe multiple medications—sometimes up to six or seven different drugs—for children who, despite all those prescriptions, remained chronically ill.

Shetreat-Klein’s experience as a pediatrician, and as the mother of a chronically ill child, led her down an alternative path where she began to explore the causes behind the widespread chronic illness we see in children today.

Her journey took her back to nature where she realized the importance of healthy soil and the tiny, microscopic organisms (microbes) living within it. These microbes, which until recently we’ve been told were bad and should be avoided, are actually the key to good health both in soils and our bodies.

The human microbiome, made up of trillions of microbes such as bacteria, fungi and protozoa, is often referred to as our “second brain,” regulating a variety of processes including digestion, immune system function and brain function. Shetreat-Klein believes that it’s our exposure (or lack thereof) to these microbes that plays a pivotal role in human health.

In her book, Shetreat-Klein writes:

Gut, immune and nervous system—and the many microbes therein—are a direct reflection of the food we eat and where that food comes from, from the soil it’s grown in to the water it swims in to the synthetic chemicals that it’s bathed in.

Fresh food, microbes (that’s right, germs) and elements of nature—soil, sunshine, water, and fresh air—make children resilient and prevent or reverse their illness.

In “The Dirt Cure,” Shetreat-Klein reveals the shocking contents of children’s food and how it’s greatly harming their bodies. She also offers solutions, including an organic diet rich in fruits and veggies, and how to encourage your child to get out in nature and play in the dirt.

Kids have the natural ability to be healthy, we just have to give them the tools to do so, she says.

Click here to pick up a copy of “The Dirt Cure” today.

To learn more about Shetreat-Klein’s recipe for good health, sign up here for her newsletter.

Julie Wilson is communications associate for the Organic Consumers Association. To keep up with OCA’s news and alerts, sign up herePublished in full with permission.

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Peter Byck – ‘The Power of Being Heard’

Author: David Witzel | Published: February 26, 2018

In our first episode of Designers of Paradise host Erik van Lennep talks with filmmaker and storyteller Peter Byck. Peter is associated with both the Schools of Sustainability and Journalism at Arizona State University. He released Carbon Nation in 2010 and has since produced a series of short documentaries exploring the impact of adaptive multi-paddock grazing on farms and ranches called Soil Carbon Cowboys.

Peter and Erik’s discussion moves from stories about telling stories to the story and science mix needed to explain the potential of healthy soil and the repercussions of new soil management approaches. They talk about Peter’s unique approach to emphasizing listening – “the power of being heard” – and serendipity to create powerful video.  Peter suggests farmers were the first scientists and that soil offers “common ground” for understanding even across political divides. They conclude with discussion of some of the thinkers who have guided Peter’s work.

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