How to Feed The World: Start Small
By Eileen Ecklund Farm photography by Paul Kirchner Studios

When American families sit down to dinner,
often the concern is to avoid eating too
much. Yet in 2010, the United Nations' Food
and Agriculture Organization (FAO) estimated that
more than 900 million people around the world were
undernourished. By 2050, the world's population is
projected to rise to somewhere around 9 billion —
and more people will likely be eating more meat,
which takes more resources and energy to produce
than most crops.
How on earth will our agricultural systems feed
all those mouths, especially while coping with
climate change, soil degradation and erosion, water
shortages, and rising energy prices? And can it be
done without increasing the environmental damage
attributed to industrial farming practices?
Maybe, if we can learn to see landscapes through
the eyes of a bee. That may seem a tall order for
such a tiny insect, but Claire Kremen believes
that understanding what is good for bees is a first
step toward shaping agricultural ecosystems, or
"agroecosystems," that can sustain both humans
and natural biodiversity, without the need for the
huge inputs of chemicals and energy that have
made industrial farming practices so damaging.
Kremen, a conservation biologist and associate
professor in the Department of Environmental
Science, Policy, and Management (ESPM), was
studying the effects of natural habitat on the crop
pollination services of wild bees when she made
an observation that would alter the focus of her
research. The farms in her study that were more
biodiverse, growing multiple crops with organic
techniques, interspersed with natural habitat,
seemed able to "grow their own bees," providing
sufficient food and nesting resources to act as
oases for wild pollinators in the midst of otherwise
intensively farmed landscapes. These farms could
rely to a large degree on wild bees to pollinate their
crops, while farms growing only one crop had to
import European honeybees for pollination.
This discovery put Kremen on the road to realizing
that most or even all of the inputs that modern
commercial farms require — chemical pesticides and
fertilizers, wasteful amounts of water and energy,
imported pollinators — were needed only because
the monoculture-dominated landscapes created by
industrial agriculture lacked biodiversity.

"From studying the pollinators, I realized that the way
we conduct agriculture has basically required us to
replace all of the ecosystem services that used to be in
the agricultural ecosystem with substitutes," she says.
If farmers could bring back many of the traditional
practices that supported biodiversity, enhanced by
the application of modern ecological science, Kremen
believes that the world could produce more food while
reducing agriculture's harmful effects, making it more
sustainable over the long term.
A growing number of policy-makers and researchers
are thinking along the same lines. A 2008 report
released by the
International Assessment of
Agricultural Science and Technology for Development,
a multinational effort spearheaded by the World Bank
and the FAO, concluded that modern agriculture would
have to shift rapidly away from industrialized systems
and toward sustainable, small-scale, diversified
farming systems in order to meet the challenges
of population growth, hunger, environmental
degradation, and climate change.
And in March of this year, the UN Special Rapporteur
on the Right to Food, Olivier De Schutter, issued a report asserting that small-scale farmers in the
poorest regions could double their food production
within 10 years by applying agroecological principles
(see
"The Agroecological Revolution"). He
made this assertion based on the work of a number of
agroecological researchers, including ESPM professor
Miguel Altieri, and cited as evidence several recent
studies of sustainable agriculture projects in poor
countries that found substantial increases in crop
yields — in some cases more than double — as well as
improvements in the farms' environmental services.
De Schutter urged countries and philanthropic groups
to invest in research and adopt policies to help scale
up agroecological practices.
Kremen and a group of UC Berkeley colleagues
from a variety of disciplines are leading the charge,
establishing a new
Berkeley Center for Diversified
Farming Systems to bring
together researchers, writers, and practitioners from
many fields to focus on feeding the world's growing
population through diversified, multifunctional
agriculture that also addresses the poverty and lack of
access to land that are the root causes of hunger. Thanks
to support from the Neckowitz Family Foundation, the Berkeley Institute of the Environment has already
hosted a series of roundtables and presentations on
topics related to diversified farming systems, with
more to come.
up agroecological practices.
In addition to Kremen, affiliated faculty include Altieri,
Lynn Huntsinger (ESPM),
Nathan Sayre
(Geography),
Alastair Iles (ESPM),
Christy Getz (a
Cooperative Extension specialist in the College of
Natural Resources),
David Zilberman (Agriculture and
Resource Economics), and
Justin Brashares (ESPM).
Berkeley is uniquely positioned to host this
interdisciplinary research and education center,
Kremen says, because of its world-renowned faculty in
the fields of agroecology, science, technology, society,
agricultural economics, and rural sociology. Notes
Huntsinger: "That's the beauty of our College, that we
can bring all these things together."
Promoting Biodiversity Across Scales
Generally speaking, a diversified farming system is
one that promotes biodiversity across spatial scales,
from plot to field to landscape. Crops are planted
and livestock raised in combination, resulting in interactions that sponsor the functioning of the
farming systems in ways that replenish natural
ecosystems. Methods employed within a diversified
farm may include minimal soil tillage, growing multiple
crops together, planting cover crops, and interspersing
trees and shrubs with crops and livestock.

These practices also provide pollination, pest and
disease control, water purification, and erosion
control. They help to build healthy, productive soil
and reduce water use, as demonstrated by research
conducted in both the Altieri and Kremen labs on
farms in Napa, Sonoma, and Yolo counties (see
On the Ground).
"Diversified farming systems produce and regenerate
the ecosystem services that the agricultural system
needs," Kremen says. This allows farmers to forgo the
harmful inputs and practices required in industrial
farming, which is beneficial for the biodiversity that in
turn produces the services. "I see it as a cycle."
At the landscape scale, diversified farming practices
include coordination among land managers to protect
wildlands in and around agricultural areas, and the
support of ecological practices on rangelands and in forests. "In California, 35 million acres of rangelands
are providing all kinds of services, from habitat for
pollinators to livestock products to viewsheds,"
says Huntsinger, a range ecologist and
manager (see
"Preserving Rangeland
Biodiversity").
Some heritage systems, like the
Ifugao rice terraces of the
Philippines, maximize the use
of mountainous terrain for rice
production while incorporating stands
of managed forest and a variety of
aquatic and terrestrial wildlife. Other
systems combine traditional farming
techniques with modern ecological science and
innovative marketing and distribution methods;
Kremen points to Full Belly Farm in California's
Capay Valley, which successfully raises
more than 80 different crops, wresting
a huge amount of produce from a
small area.
Even industrial farms can become
more biodiverse through the
application of improved techniques.
Monocrops such as vineyards, for
example, can be broken up with
flowering cover crops, hedgerows, and
corridors that help control pests without
chemical inputs.
How to Feed 9 Billion?
For all their potential benefits, the question remains:
Can diversified farming systems feed a growing,
changing world? Perhaps a better question might be,
can we feed the world without them? Despite the
tremendous crop yields made possible by industrial
farming and the technologies of the Green Revolution
of the 1960s and '70s, 900 million people still do
not get enough to eat, and starvation has become
a recurrent feature of life in sub-Saharan Africa.
Increasing the food supply is not enough; that food
needs to get to those who can least afford it.
"The Green Revolution didn't solve world hunger; it
solved the number of calories," Kremen says.
Most of the food consumed in developing nations is
produced by small farmers, many of them still using
subsistence methods. Their farms are where the
productivity gains must come from, and the question,
Kremen says, is whether countries will adopt policies
that favor industrial intensification, or sustainable
intensification based on agroecological principles.
One of the key reasons that the Green Revolution
bypassed the world's poorest farmers is that they
couldn't afford its technologies. In his report to
the UN, De Schutter pointed to evidence that agroecological methods outperform chemical
fertilizers in boosting the amount of food produced
by subsistence farmers. Many of these methods are
inexpensive but require more labor — which could
create more rural jobs and help to alleviate poverty.

"We won't solve hunger and stop climate change with
industrial farming on large plantations," De Schutter
said in a statement accompanying the report's
release. "The solution lies in supporting small-scale
farmers' knowledge and experimentation, and in
raising incomes of smallholders so as to contribute to
rural development."
Industrial agriculture isn't likely to disappear any time
soon, and many experts believe that any solution
to the twinned problems of hunger and resource
depletion will require some combination of industrial
and sustainable methods. Some, like agricultural
economist Zilberman, argue that modern industrial
technologies, particularly genetic engineering, could
have a crucial role to play in helping agriculture to
wean itself from the worst of its chemical abuses,
through pest-resistant crop varieties, and to adapt
to climate change by developing heat- and droughttolerant
varieties.
"Diversified farming systems are crucial to the future
of the University, California, and even to global food
production, but the concept really has to be inclusive
of modern biotechnologies," Zilberman says. "It has to take the best of science that's sustainable and combine
it with environmentalism."
Kremen says that, while the economics perspective
is a key one for this growing interdisciplinary
group, she is skeptical about the ultimate value
of genetic engineering, arguing that genetically
modified organisms are just another variety of the
reductionist, high-tech approach that has led to so many of industrial agriculture's worst abuses.
"People love technological fixes," she says. "But spending
so much effort to produce these engineered varieties that
then have severe vulnerabilities or cause new problems
is not, I think, a very good strategy. I'd rather see that
effort put into coming up with agroecologically designed
communities that do the same thing — that use water
and nutrients really efficiently. "
Altieri, who calls agroecology "the antithesis of
transgenic technology," says that "there is not one
acre of transgenics that feeds the one billion poor
people. Transgenic corn and soybean are produced
to feed cattle that the poor cannot afford, and for
biofuels, canola, and cotton that don't feed anybody."

Investing in Research
Creating and supporting diversified agricultural
systems, both in developing and developed countries,
will require a substantial investment in research,
and not just in the natural sciences. Work in fields
like economics, sociology, and public policy can help
societies grow a sustainable, biodiverse system of food
production and distribution that allows farmers to not
merely survive, but thrive.
"Structurally, one of the biggest challenges to truly
sustainable agriculture is the push to do everything as
cheaply as possible," says Christy Getz, who studies
farm labor conditions and other societal factors
(see
"The People Behind Our Food"). "Most
profits in the organic sector go to the largest players
in the food chain; very few small organic farmers
make significant profits. Continued industrialization,
concentration, and consolidation are changing the face
of organic agriculture."
Another challenge is to identify the best methods for
encouraging farmers in developed countries to switch
from industrial to diversified farming practices, research
that Iles, whose field is environmental law and policy,
is pursuing (see
"Getting the Policies Right").
Among the questions he's investigating are: How can
farmer motivations be better linked to the science of
agroecology? Through setting rules, or through creating
economic incentives, or by creating peer pressure? How
can we evaluate the effectiveness of different types of
policies?
The goal of establishing the Center for Diversified
Farming Systems is to close some of these research
gaps — by providing a venue where scholars can share
their work, and by helping to train future leaders in
the field who in turn will translate agroecological
scientific advances into practice. Ultimately, the aim
of Kremen and her Berkeley colleagues is to create a
place where ideas about how to create a sustainable
future for human agriculture can be debated, and the
best winnowed from the crop.