This continues
to make clear that we have begun to retreat from chemical dependent
agricultural protocols. Sometimes it
will happen because of outright collapse, but mostly because the cost benefit
equation has rolled over. Then the
natural shift will be to superior no-till methods and natural soil; remediation
resulting is a slow but effective recovery.
Just do not expect speed here.
The truth is
that we know how to get there and we also know that methods will continue to
actually improve. This is powerfully
optimistic but millions of farmers today are all practical laboratory
technicians working on optimizing the result.
There is no better formula for innovation.
The blanket protocol that is been slowly explored is the measured application of biochar and the advent of a viable communal labor pool that allows effective intensification. Even better will be a robotic fruit picking machine that is fast and effective. I have no difficulty keeping such a machine working throughout the season with careful planning and rotation. That integrated with human contribution and the gross per acre jumps hugely.
In the real
world the full conversion to the advanced organic, no till robotized
agricultural system will take another sixty years and become global, include
all tropical soils and ultimately all deserts and the boreal forests and
everything in between to support a global population approaching 100 billion.
The truth
remains that global agriculture does have an happy ending, however badly it is
distorted today.
Doug Bell on the Decline of the Green Revolution and
the Future of Farming
With Anthony
Wile -
December 22, 2013
The Daily Bell
is pleased to present this exclusive interview with Douglas Bell
Introduction: Doug
Bell grew up in Los Angeles and graduated from Wesleyan University. After
nearly a decade as an industrial designer and project manager in a professional
education company, Bell was recruited to the growing Supercuts haircutting
franchise. He went to Houston to open his own stores and from '83 – '04, Bell
grew his Supercuts business to $18,000,000 annual sales with 500 employees. He
was the third largest franchisee in the system in 2000 with 52 shops in
Houston, TX and SW Florida. After selling his business and leaving Supercuts,
Bell began focusing on farming and eventually decided to offer farmland in
Uruguay, resulting in the current Grasslands UY, LLC project. He
has completed five marathons and was a nationally ranked Grand Prix endurance
motorcycle racer.
Daily
Bell: So give us an update. What's been going on with Grasslands?
Doug
Bell: Since the last time we spoke, we announced a 15 percent appreciation
of our farmland and raised the unit entry cost to $57,500 from $50,000. We
purchased a third farm and have 750 acres on which we are growing soy, wheat,
barley and corn.
Daily
Bell: Remind us about Uruguay, which is not a well-known country to the
West.
Doug
Bell: It's a small country at the south end of South America,
approximately the size of Missouri, often called "the Switzerland of South
America." The population is predominantly made up of immigrants from
Italy, Spain, Germany and Switzerland. They built a European-style industrial
and agricultural nation-state with excellent water, fertile soil and a domestic
banking culture that respects private property.
Uruguay is a good
environment for those seeking risk-averse investments. From my perspective, the
political climate is stable, distanced from economic and political risk. Along
with Chile, it has the lowest crime and corruption rates of Latin America.
There is transparency, an accepted rule of law (civil law) legal system and
minimal social turmoil. The entire country is mapped for soil productivity,
empirically classified and easily verifiable. Farmland is a good addition to
your portfolio along with other hard assets.
Daily
Bell: Let's also remind readers how you've differentiated yourself
agriculturally. It's part of a larger trend called no-till ...
Doug
Bell: There are generally three basic farming methods: green, organic
and no-till. The green farming revolution lasted from the 1940s until
today, but gradually it has become less effective, producing diminishing
returns as the various chemicals and pesticides have made the land less
fertile and the required tilling damages soils and accelerates erosion.
Daily Bell: That's
a discouraging but identifiable trend ...
Doug
Bell: There are some who are predicting outright disaster from green
farming. There's no doubt it was very effective in its day and increased food
production dramatically.
But
technological advances sometimes have unintended detrimental effects. Roundup
Ready seeds used in green revolution farming require the use of glyphosate
which can kill soil bacteria and finds its way into the food chain, reportedly
having a negative impact on human health over time. Some of the cumulative
destructive effects of the green revolution are now being reported.
If I could quote
a recent article in the UK Telegraph:
"Dust to
Dust: a man-made Malthusian crisis"
American
scientists have made an unsettling discovery. Crop farming across the
Prairies since the late 19th Century has caused a collapse of the soil microbia
that holds the ecosystem together.
They do not know
exactly what role is played by the bacteria. It is a new research field. Nor do
they know where the tipping point lies, or how easily this can be reversed.
Nobody yet knows whether this is happening in other parts of the world.
A team at the
University of Colorado under Noah Fierer used DNA gene technology to test the
'verrucomicrobia' in Prairie soil, contrasting tilled land with the rare
pockets of ancient tallgrass found in cemeteries and reservations. The paper
published in the US journal Science found that crop agriculture has
"drastically altered" the biology of the land. "The soils
currently found throughout the region bear little resemblance to their
pre-agricultural state," it concluded.
Daily
Bell: Good old Ambrose. That's certainly incendiary ... You could say that
the 20th century's green revolution is petering out amidst considerable controversy.
Doug Bell: The
microbial collapse is a significant and worrisome event. It hasn't received a
lot of coverage but that doesn't make it any less concerning. We'll see what
they come up with in India, China and elsewhere. If indeed there's a real
microbial collapse, it could have a devastating impact on developing countries
to begin with but also on the First World food supply.
Daily
Bell: Some of this may be what we characterize as an elite
resource-scarcity meme. The mainstream media likes to
frighten people about the basic building blocks of life, food, water, air, etc.
This certainly could fall into the category of information that would panic
people into believing that starvation was an increasing possibility – and thus
open the door for even more globalist meddling. Not saying it's not true ...
Doug
Bell: Material appearing in the mainstream press can be alarmist. But
sometimes there is some reality to it. I would tend to believe there's
something to this given the widespread acceptance of green revolution farming
and the accepted fact that glyphosate inhibits EPSPS, which is only found in
plants and microorganisms. And if there is a microbial collapse, then there is
legitimate cause for concern. But we think there are remedies.
Daily
Bell: Well, yes. But one can't help observing the green revolution was an
internationalist enterprise. It relies heavily on manmade chemicals, pesticides
and herbicides. The idea that soil has been depleted around the world as a
result is not exactly surprising. That's how these things tend to work. Elite
solutions, often endorsed by the UN-oriented global
infrastructure, end up causing more problems than they solve.
Doug
Bell: Perhaps. In this case there are antidotes.
Daily
Bell: Okay, continue with no-till, please.
Doug Bell: No-till
techniques emphasize soil repair and enrichment. These techniques have actually
been under development since the 1940s, though no-till has been overshadowed by
the green revolution. Edward Faulkner is commonly held to be the father of
no-till and these days it's getting quite a bit more attention as questions
mount about "green-revolution" farming. Grants and awards are
becoming more common to encourage no-till. Gabe
Brown,
a North Dakota farmer, gives us a hopeful blueprint of regenerating soils after
a lifetime of damage by tilling and green revolution practices.
Daily
Bell: There's something involving carbon, as well ...
Doug
Bell: No-till is being advertised as keeping carbon in the soil, which
reduces carbon in the atmosphere – which is therefore said to have a beneficial
effect in stopping global warming. According to
the Agricultural Research Service of the United States Department of
Agriculture, "carbon in the form of organic matter is a key factor in
holding soil particles together."
Daily
Bell: Well, we're not big fans of the global warming meme but it sounds
like no-till has advantages, nonetheless.
Doug
Bell: We currently use some soil fertilizers and supplements so our
approach is not purely organic, but we use significantly less than the green
program. Organic means you don't add anything to your process that is not
within old traditions of farming and soil preparation. No-till also involves
disciplined crop rotation, and here the Uruguayan government recently became
more assertive, documenting all crop rotations.
No-till is
popular throughout Latin America – including in Argentina, though right
now Argentine farming is suffering from the larger economic crisis in that
country. That's also affecting Uruguay.
Daily
Bell: Let's discuss that. What are some of the additional economic
impacts?
Doug
Bell: Argentina is again having economic difficulties as a function of
their economic and political policies. Obviously, the problems in Argentina
have had a wide variety of impacts. Cash constraints have restricted transfer
of capital out of the country and that's had an impact on the Uruguayan real
estate market. Real estate values are down and farmland is not inflating so
quickly, either. Uruguay farmland increased explosively from 2004 to 2009. It
has recently been appreciating at around 10 percent per annum. We are seeing
this continuing in the 8-10% range in the future.
Daily
Bell: Any chance of the Argentine system being visited on Uruguay?
Doug
Bell: I do not think the Argentine heavy-handed economic policies will be
adopted here in Uruguay. Obviously, the current president, Mr. Mujica, is a
populist. The previous several presidents in Uruguay were business friendly and
the chances are the next elected president will be from that side of the
constituency.
Daily
Bell: What does the future hold for Grasslands and what about liquidity?
Doug
Bell: We currently own 750 acres and we anticipate continued investment
enabling us to buy 3 to 5 more farms over the next year. We'll continue the
same approach, creating value by owning farms with superior soils in the
southwestern region, focusing on growing grains in rotation, without buildings,
cattle or forestry. We have a contract agriculture service eliminating the
complexity of having employees and equipment. Farmland turns over regularly in
Uruguay. We think this business model will make us among the most attractive
opportunities if and when we want to liquidate.
Corn, soy and
wheat have all increased between 12% and 15% each year for over ten years. Meat
and poultry have increased in the 6-8% range. Following an explosive 2012, corn
regressed to the mean, still trending up 15% per year. The trends are clear.
The world has less farmland, of which usable farmland continues to erode, and
the world has an upper limit on arable land available to farm. As the
population continues to increase, the demands on this finite amount of farmland
means that less farmland has to feed more people.
Daily
Bell: This is obviously part of what convinces you and your investors that
farmland is a good investment ...
Doug
Bell: Well run farms using non-invasive, beneficial techniques are a
modern imperative. How else are we going to feed 9 billion people? The
effective yields of green revolution are declining. No-till and organic farmers are at the front of the new wave. The
soil degradation is being propped up by increasingly expensive fertilizer
inputs. Farmland is a hard asset that provides income from crops and land
appreciation opportunity.
Daily
Bell: But you've indicated it may also be a kind of portfolio imperative.
Doug Bell:
Bonds and equities sit on a foundation of fiat money, governed by
the Federal Reserve. I think we all
are gaining an appreciation of the Fed's limited effectiveness. Farmland is a
hard asset that provides income from crops and land appreciation opportunity.
Having hard assets as a segment of your portfolio is essential for wealth
preservation.
Some economists
have suggested that today the US government faces total obligations of US$200
trillion. The Daily Bell has written about that, in fact. That's trillion with
a "T." As Baby Boomers move through their last demographic segment,
tremendous pressures will be brought to bear on the US economy, perhaps
impossible ones. These pressures are already evident. Let me list them:
Hyperinflation:
In the last two decades, at least 10 fiat currencies have imploded into
hyperinflation.
Sovereign debt:
Unprecedented global debt – instead of addressing the issue, governments are
kicking the can down the road. The U.S. is a major driver of world economies,
but the Federal Reserve is cornered and out of bullets. It cannot cut rates
further and the mere mention of 'tapering' sent shivers down the back of the
markets. When rates rise, as they will inevitably do, the interest on the
federal debt will become unmanageable.
Unreliable
indices: REAL price inflation is far greater than stated price inflation. It is
likely 7-10% per Shadowstats. Thirty years ago the Fed decoupled food
and energy from the CPI to maintain an appearance of only 2-3% CPI. In
1960 one income supported a family of four; in 2010 it takes two incomes
to support that family.
Food and
farmland prices are increasing: As food prices continue to show the effects of
relentless inflation, the farmland on which the food grows correlates to those
price increases. In 1992 prime US corn farmland averaged $1,000 per acre.
In 2008, 16 years later, it was valued at $7,017 per acre. And since then
farmland prices have continued to increase. This acreage is not likely
producing seven times as much yield warranting a seven-fold increase in
underlying net asset value. Yet it now costs seven times as much to buy
the same property.
Dollar
debasement: In this example, the purchasing power of the 1992 dollar has eroded
13% per year for this 16-year period, leaving us the purchasing power of 14
cents. Have most retirement portfolios increased from $100k to $700k since
1992? Investors are not keeping up.
Daily
Bell: That's a lot to digest.
Doug
Bell: There's more. In addition to legitimate pressures on food prices, we
have a good deal of manipulation. No less of a publication than Foreign
Policy chronicled manipulation of food prices in an article entitled
"How Goldman Sachs Created the Food Crisis." Let me provide an
excerpt:
There's another
reason why food across the world has become so expensive: Wall Street greed. It
took the brilliant minds of Goldman Sachs to realize the simple truth that
nothing is more valuable than our daily bread. And where there's value, there's
money to be made.
In 1991, Goldman
bankers, led by their prescient president Gary Cohn, came up with a new kind of
investment product, a derivative that tracked 24 raw materials, from precious metals and energy
to coffee, cocoa, cattle, corn, hogs, soy, and wheat. They weighted the
investment value of each element, blended and commingled the parts into sums,
then reduced what had been a complicated collection of real things into a
mathematical formula that could be expressed as a single manifestation, to be
known henceforth as the Goldman Sachs Commodity Index (GSCI).
For just under a
decade, the GSCI remained a relatively static investment vehicle, as bankers
remained more interested in risk and collateralized debt than in anything that
could be literally sowed or reaped. Then, in 1999, the Commodities Futures
Trading Commission deregulated futures markets.
All of a sudden,
bankers could take as large a position in grains as they liked, an opportunity
that had, since the Great Depression, only been
available to those who actually had something to do with the production of our
food. Change was coming to the great grain exchanges of Chicago, Minneapolis,
and Kansas City -- which for 150 years had helped to moderate the peaks and valleys
of global food prices.
Farming may seem
bucolic, but it is an inherently volatile industry, subject to the vicissitudes
of weather, disease, and disaster. ... The structure of the GSCI paid no heed
to the centuries-old buy-sell/sell-buy patterns. This newfangled derivative
product was "long only," which meant the product was constructed to
buy commodities, and only buy. ... Bankers recognized a good system when they
saw it, and dozens of speculative nonphysical hedgers followed Goldman's lead
and joined the commodities index game, including Barclays, Deutsche Bank,
Pimco, JP Morgan Chase, AIG, Bear
Stearns, and Lehman Brothers, to name but a few purveyors of commodity index
funds. ...
The money tells
the story. Since the bursting of the tech bubble in 2000, there has been a
50-fold increase in dollars invested in commodity index funds. To put the
phenomenon in real terms: In 2003, the commodities futures market still totaled
a sleepy $13 billion ... But in the first 55 days of 2008, speculators poured
$55 billion into commodity markets, and by July, $318 billion was roiling the
markets. Food inflation has remained steady since.
The article goes
on to explain that so much money roiling the securitized food market led to a
food bubble.
From 2005 to
2008, the worldwide price of food rose 80 percent -- and has kept rising."
Today, along with the cumulative index, the Standard & Poors GSCI provides
219 distinct index "tickers," so investors can boot up their
Bloomberg system and bet on everything from palladium to soybean oil, biofuels
to feeder cattle.
But the boom in
new speculative opportunities in global grain, edible oil, and livestock
markets has created a vicious cycle. The more the price of food commodities
increases, the more money pours into the sector, and the higher prices rise.
The result of Wall Street's venture into grain and feed and livestock has been
a shock to the global food production and delivery system.
Not only does
the world's food supply have to contend with constricted supply and increased
demand for real grain, but investment bankers have engineered an artificial
upward pull on the price of grain futures. The result: Imaginary wheat
dominates the price of real wheat, as speculators (traditionally one-fifth of
the market) now outnumber bona-fide hedgers four-to-one.
The article
concludes that such manipulation is not going to end any time soon. Food costs
will continue to rise, farmland will become more expensive and commodities
generally – especially edible ones – will continue to experience supply and
demand volatility.
Daily
Bell: So this constitutes three distinct pressures on food stuffs. First
is what we would identify as a scarcity meme – the idea that top banking men
want to give people the idea that food is scarce. Second, there is economic
pressure from the current fiat money system supported by central banking monopoly.
Third, there is outright manipulation, as you've described it.
Doug
Bell: All these pressures are upwards, of course. But even without your
three drivers, we are left with the dynamics of food production and costs.
I summarize
these points regularly:
The world's
arable farm land is finite. Due to soil degradation, erosion and urban
incursion, we have less farmland supporting an exponentially increasing
population.
Potable water is
increasingly scarce, and 70% of all fresh water is devoted to farm irrigation. Most
major aquifers are being depleted faster than they are replenished. Certainly
this is the case with the US Ogallala aquifer.
As hundreds of
millions of people move into the middle class they want more protein in their
diet. It takes about 10 times the grains and water to produce the same calories
as animal protein.
We are in a
cycle of weather volatility and uncertainty challenging farming yields.
People need
food. The trick is to identify regions around the world where crops can be
grown efficiently and for a profit. Uruguay is a sensible, even ideal, solution
from many important standpoints.
Daily
Bell: Okay, points taken. Thanks for the update. Anything else you want to
add?
Doug
Bell: Thank you. People are welcome to visit our website at http://www.grasslandsuy.com or reach
me at dougbell@grasslandsuy.com.
Anthony Wile
The Daily Bell
After Thoughts
We are happy to
see the progress of Doug Bell's project, as he is offering an alternative to
securities investing and one that is an unusual asset class. While his approach
is not strictly speaking organic, he is expanding as he goes. Importantly,
people like Doug are forging determinedly away from green revolution farming,
which seems increasingly destructive and controlling.
Uruguay itself,
meanwhile, continues to attract attention and was recently named the
"country of the year" by the Economist magazine. Uruguay's
Punte del Este destination attracts such individuals as Bill Gates and Mark
Zuckerberg every summer. The country is an artificial one wedged between
Brazil, Argentina and Chile and, as Doug said, is often called the Switzerland
of South America.
It is being
reported that there are forces at work trying to develop Uruguay into a kind of
Latin American Silicon Valley that will draw clients from Europe. Whatever the
globalists have in mind, however, they will have to contend with the population
itself, which is mostly transplanted Southern Italian and wary of outside
influences.
The Italian
mafia took root in Southern Italy. Uruguay still has no Pizza Hut, Kentucky
Fried Chicken, etc. It's mostly one flat farm but Monsanto has not made a whole
lot of progress in reconfiguring the botanical landscape, which is surely a
good thing.
The definitive
change that is coming to Uruguay will happen because of the recent legalization
of marijuana. In the meantime, Uruguay will continue to be known for its
organic produce and meats. And, of course, shareholders will identify it with
Grasslands.
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