What would agriculture look like with zero inputs? with Shane Simonsen, author of zero-input agriculture

What would agriculture look like with zero inputs? with Shane Simonsen, author of zero-input agriculture

Though I’ve been inspired by all the amazing examples of regenerative farming through the people that I’ve interviewed through this series, there’s one glaring commonality between all of them and that’s the fact that the success of their enterprises all rely heavily on the destructive infrastructure that we currently have in place to get the organic and feed inputs for their enterprises, the seeds or young animals that they then raise, and the fossil fuel system that then transports their food products to market. I’m not at all criticizing these people of their work. It would be near impossible to make a living and produce a meaningful amount of food, certainly not enough to base a business around, if they weren't working with the resources and the systems of our modern times, but there’s no denying that the same systems that make these business models feasible are unlikely to continue for much longer and certainly not in the way we are using and operating them now. That’s why I got really excited about the work and writings of Shane Simonsen who is conducting personal experiments and documenting the process and observations on his homestead in eastern Australia all around the concept of zero input agriculture. His blog by that same name is one of the most original approaches to large scale food production that I’ve come across in a long time and asks the simple question of “how might we still be able to produce enough food for ourselves and our communities if we no longer had access to all of the inputs and fossil fuels of our modern times.” Despite sounding like a post apocalyptic exercise in primitive living, Shane’s writing is surprisingly optimistic and pragmatic. In a small excerpt from his very first post from September 2019 he writes: In the resource constrained future ahead of us these input dependent approaches to growing food will become impractical or impossible. Instead new systems that rely on locally adapted crops and livestock, integrated into systems that are truly compatible with the local geology and climate will be required. I have taken on the challenge of developing these systems in our particular region in the remaining two decades of vigor I have left in me. This blog is an account of this journey. Hopefully I can inspire some of you to follow in my direction and develop your own locally adapted systems.

Episoder(421)

Academia and Farming: The disconnect and potential

Academia and Farming: The disconnect and potential

In today’s deep dive episode we’re taking on the behemoth of a topic that is the broken system and relationship between academic institutions and farmers on the ground. For a long time there was tra...

17 Apr 1h 20min

From Waste to Wealth: Closing Loops on the Farm

From Waste to Wealth: Closing Loops on the Farm

In this panel session, we’re exploring one of the most practical and underused opportunities in regenerative farming and rural life: learning to see waste streams as life streams. Across farms and vil...

3 Apr 59min

Measuring Regeneration: Beyond data and metrics

Measuring Regeneration: Beyond data and metrics

Welcome back everyone to the second of the Deep Dive episodes. In this new format the intention is to bring complexity back into the conversations around regenerative agriculture. Myself and many of m...

20 Mar 1h 1min

Overcoming natural disasters on the farm: Recovery, prevention and adaptation

Overcoming natural disasters on the farm: Recovery, prevention and adaptation

Welcome back everyone to another panel session. In light of all the stories of extreme weather and emergencies around the Iberian peninsula and other parts of Europe in the past months, we’re going to...

6 Mar 55min

Who gets to say what "regeneration" means?

Who gets to say what "regeneration" means?

Welcome to episode two of season ten of the Regenerative Skills podcast. As I mentioned last time, the show is changing this year: we’re moving to two episodes a month, and I’ll be alternating between...

23 Feb 39min

Farming Without Burning Out: Boundaries, Joy, and Mental Resilience

Farming Without Burning Out: Boundaries, Joy, and Mental Resilience

To start off the year, I wanted to explore a topic that often gets swept under the rug. Mental well-being, or the lack of it, in farming communities has reached epedemic levels. Farmers in Europe face...

6 Feb 58min

Policy change, advocacy, and the future of regen ag in Europe: panel session

Policy change, advocacy, and the future of regen ag in Europe: panel session

There’s no way around it, governance of the agricultural industry has a massive impact on how farms and the agrifood system are managed. Policy, regulations, and incentives are driven by many forces a...

19 Des 202558min

Climate Resilience on European Farms: Adaptation and New Potential

Climate Resilience on European Farms: Adaptation and New Potential

Welcome back to another episode in our panel discussion series. In this edition we’ll be focusing on the challenges and opportunities of climate adaptation with examples of farmers in different key an...

12 Des 202556min

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