The Climate Action Plan of the Ontario Climate Emergency Campaign contains a number of important strategies and actions for us to collectively shift away from established paradigms and practices --- the business as usual --- toward more resilient and equitable systems in the immediate present and for future generations. Given that we are in the middle of the autumn harvest season Point #9 of the CAP is very timely, as it implores us to “Invest in local, organic, regenerative agriculture & plant-rich food systems”. For quite some time now we’ve heard about the importance of eating local and organic --- in other words, about reducing the fossil fuel imprint of our food having to travel great distances around the world in favour of purchasing from nearby farmers, and to select those foods that have been grown largely without the use of synthetic chemical fertilizers, herbicides and pesticides. But what exactly does regeneration mean as it pertains to agriculture? Simply put, it’s a practice of agriculture that is first and foremost about nurturing the restoration of healthy, living soils. All our relations matter. The soil is a complex substance of organic and inorganic elements that ultimately sustains a highly complex web of life, from the microscopic bacteria and fungi that teem underground to the larger flora and fauna that live above the surface. Plants and animals have always co-existed and co-evolved throughout history, mutually intertwined. It is only during the industrialization of agriculture during the long twentieth-century that the two were separated into monocropped fields and factory feedlots, to devastating effect for the soil microbiome and climate stability today. |