Stories
Slash Boxes
Comments

SoylentNews is people

SoylentNews is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop. Only 17 submissions in the queue.
posted by FatPhil on Friday March 29 2019, @11:12PM   Printer-friendly
from the bring-on-your-best-shitposts dept.

The planet's prodigious poo problem

How much poo is generated by the world’s farms?

Recent research has estimated that by 2030, the planet will be generating at least 5bn tonnes of poo each year, with the vast majority being deposited by livestock. With 80% of farms in the Netherlands already producing more cow dung than they can legally use as fertiliser, and China resorting to drastic measures to try to reduce the amount of manure being discharged into rivers, scientists say this is a major environment and health challenge.

“It’s a huge problem,” says Joe Brown, professor of environmental engineering at Georgia Institute of Technology. “Animal waste is going up because as populations and wealth increase, there’s a bigger demand for protein. But while we’ve seen lots of initiatives to safely manage human waste, nobody is talking about this.” [...]

What are the knock-on environmental risks?

Because most first world farming systems are highly concentrated, industrial operations, this produces very concentrated streams of waste. Unless these are dealt with rapidly, they can pollute the air with large amounts of harmful gases such as ammonia, nitrous oxide and hydrogen sulphide.

Inhaling these toxic fumes can be lethal in large quantities, and studies have repeatedly shown that people who live near industrial farms have a much greater risk of chronic asthma, respiratory irritation, immune suppression, and even mood disorders.

Water pollution and climate change are also issues.

[Ed's notes: My first thoughts are on how this might be mirroring Victorian-era poolution in cities before cars took over, and from there to how many other times too much poo from too many nearby animals has deleteriously affected the humans who were encouraging the growth of the problem. Feel free to fling other examples at me if you can think of them! -- FP]


Original Submission

 
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.
Display Options Threshold/Breakthrough Mark All as Read Mark All as Unread
The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.
  • (Score: 5, Informative) by physicsmajor on Friday March 29 2019, @11:53PM (12 children)

    by physicsmajor (1471) on Friday March 29 2019, @11:53PM (#822123)

    This breaks down because the industrial operations in question are not using free range animals, where there really is a cycle - they are instead bringing in feed from elsewhere and growing animals in very dense proximity, usually applying generous steroids to prompt muscle development.

    In these cases it's actually rather easy to end up with an excess of waste.

    Starting Score:    1  point
    Moderation   +3  
       Informative=3, Total=3
    Extra 'Informative' Modifier   0  
    Karma-Bonus Modifier   +1  

    Total Score:   5  
  • (Score: 5, Insightful) by Runaway1956 on Saturday March 30 2019, @01:48AM (6 children)

    by Runaway1956 (2926) Subscriber Badge on Saturday March 30 2019, @01:48AM (#822156) Journal

    The seemingly obvious solution to big agri problems, is to put an end to big agri farms. Or, force big agri to spread that manure out across America, where it will do the most good. Is there a cost to manur spreaders? Yes, of course there is. But we really can spread manure where it will to more good, then just running into the rivers, and then the oceans. Big agri could easily make a deal with other corporations like Weyerhauser, to spread manure on the millions of acres of tree farms. More of the manure can go right back to the millions of acres of farms which produce the feed that big agri feeds to their livestock. Again - it will cost to ship that manure back to it's source, but big agri will just pass that cost on to the consumer.

    There are solutions, but we aren't willing to use those solutions.

    • (Score: 5, Insightful) by Thexalon on Saturday March 30 2019, @02:21AM (5 children)

      by Thexalon (636) on Saturday March 30 2019, @02:21AM (#822178)

      Of course we aren't willing to use those solutions: Big agribusinesses own the governments at least as much as other big businesses, and storing the poo in giant toxic lagoons is cheaper in the short run, and the risks are incurred on everybody else, so it's what big agribusiness will do every single time.

      Ultimately, we're going to have to get away from monoculture. The basic model of conventional agriculture as it stands today is to grow all the corn in one place, all the beans in another place, all the vegetables in yet another place, all the hogs in still another facility, etc, and the goal is to scale up each of those facilities' outputs as high as humanly possible. This makes it easier to use giant machines on them and create industrial processes around them, but what it costs you is the very real benefits to putting livestock alongside plants and different kinds of plants near each other. For instance, native Americans fed most of the Americas with the "Three Sisters" combination of corn, pole beans, and squash: The corn gave the beans something to climb, the beans fix nitrogen for the corn and the squash, and the squash is a natural pest and weed deterrent. The idea of having a farm with only one crop is a 20th century invention, because up until then humans hard learned from hard experience that single-crop farming just didn't work as well as mixed farming.

      --
      The only thing that stops a bad guy with a compiler is a good guy with a compiler.
      • (Score: 2) by The Mighty Buzzard on Saturday March 30 2019, @10:51AM (4 children)

        by The Mighty Buzzard (18) Subscriber Badge <themightybuzzard@proton.me> on Saturday March 30 2019, @10:51AM (#822283) Homepage Journal

        Thus crop rotation. Around here it's corn, cotton, and soy beans mostly. No industrial farming going on around here to speak of compared to the number of boring old farmers trying to make ends meet.

        --
        My rights don't end where your fear begins.
        • (Score: 2) by Thexalon on Saturday March 30 2019, @05:49PM (3 children)

          by Thexalon (636) on Saturday March 30 2019, @05:49PM (#822424)

          Crop rotation sure beats not rotating crops. No argument there.

          It's not the same effect as actual mixed agriculture though. For example, those boring old farmers probably spend a whole bunch on various chemical fertilizers for their field, while livestock operations hundreds of miles away spend a bunch dealing with all the manure that would be really useful as fertilizer and would be cost-effective to use for fertilizer if it didn't have to be moved all that distance. Compare that with a couple of my neighbors: 1 of them does small-scale vegetable farming, the folks across the road from them raise some livestock, so going from manure to fertilizer is a very easy operation.

          I also know some Amish folks not to far away. They get very good results using traditional methods, and keep their soil extremely healthy in the process.

          The techniques of commercial agriculture completely transformed in the first half of the 20th century. Before that, very mixed agriculture was the norm. I'm not convinced the new system is better in the long term.

          --
          The only thing that stops a bad guy with a compiler is a good guy with a compiler.
          • (Score: 2) by The Mighty Buzzard on Sunday March 31 2019, @11:58AM (2 children)

            It doesn't matter if it's better long-term or not because it's absolutely necessary immediate-term. Multi-crop farming does not scale. You can't use one machine to harvest all the crops at once and you can't harvest them individually without destroying all the other crops grown with the one you're harvesting. We can't even get enough welders/plumbers/hvac guys/etc... to keep prices low because everyone wants to sit on their ass at a desk instead of working for a living, so where are we to get the tens to hundreds of millions of crop pickers that would be necessary to do multi-crop farming? And, more importantly, are you willing to pay an order of magnitude more for food because it just became a shitload less efficient?

            As for livestock being raised far from the farms, that's mostly because cattle are a lot less profitable than crops per acre on good farmland. Cattle do just as well in a large area of scrub grass that's useless for most anything else, so that's where the farmers have pushed them by way of planting crops anywhere crops will grow well. It's not like we don't have a couple handy systems of transportation at hand for relatively cheap.

            --
            My rights don't end where your fear begins.
            • (Score: 2) by Thexalon on Sunday March 31 2019, @06:10PM (1 child)

              by Thexalon (636) on Sunday March 31 2019, @06:10PM (#822782)

              It doesn't matter if it's better long-term or not because it's absolutely necessary immediate-term.

              Just because you can't conceive of another way of doing things doesn't make what you're doing "absolutely necessary".

              First off, for a lot of crops, we're harvesting by hand right now. Obviously that's not the case with wheat, corn, soy, and cotton, but the idea that we couldn't hand-harvest simply isn't true. We don't hand-harvest because it would be more expensive in the short-term or involve employing people we don't currently employ in that kind of work, not because we couldn't do it.

              We can't even get enough welders/plumbers/hvac guys/etc... to keep prices low because everyone wants to sit on their ass at a desk instead of working for a living, so where are we to get the tens to hundreds of millions of crop pickers that would be necessary to do multi-crop farming?

              1. Which job is easier to do? Weld, raise crops, raise livestock, do plumbing, HVAC work, etc, or sit at a desk doing nothing useful? I think we'd all agree it's the desk-sitters.
              2. Which job pays better? Welding/raising crops/raising livestock/plumbing/HVAC/etc or sitting at a desk doing nothing useful? The desk-sitters, again, in a lot of cases.
              You can't fault the desk-sitters for making a completely rational choice to prefer desk-sitting for often more money rather than working their butts off for less money or the same money.

              You can, however, make agriculture jobs not suck so much that flipping burgers at McD's or driving for Uber is a more attractive option. This may involve advertising, hiring, transporting, training, etc people who haven't previously done the kind of work you're talking about, but I'm guessing that the 6 million or so officially unemployed people and the many adults who aren't part of the labor force might be up for doing farm work if it were something they knew about and was good enough to make it worth doing.

              And, more importantly, are you willing to pay an order of magnitude more for food because it just became a shitload less efficient?

              Farmers get about 1/8 of each dollar spent at the grocery store, so to make food cost 10 times as much ("an order of magnitude") you'd need to multiply farmers' costs by 80.

              --
              The only thing that stops a bad guy with a compiler is a good guy with a compiler.
              • (Score: 2) by The Mighty Buzzard on Monday April 01 2019, @12:26AM

                Just because you can't conceive of another way of doing things doesn't make what you're doing "absolutely necessary".

                Yes, it does. Unless you not only have an alternative way not only figured out but ready to put on farms tomorrow, it is absolutely necessary that things continue on the way they are until you do.

                Which job pays better?

                You'd be surprised. Pick most any industrial union shop. The electricians will bring home more than anyone but the plant manager and even he's not a given. Ditto welders if their welds need to pass x-ray rather than just hold for a while.

                You can, however, make agriculture jobs not suck so much that flipping burgers at McD's or driving for Uber is a more attractive option.

                Not very easily you can't. Most people never even consider that hard work might actually be enjoyable than putting up with people's shit all day (it absolutely is). It is in fact a hell of a lot more enjoyable to put up with people's literal shit as a plumber than their figurative shit as someone whose job is talking to customers. The last generation or three of parents have done the nation a grave disservice by maligning hard physical work in favor of office jobs. That's going to take at least three more generations to undo and we haven't even started to try yet.

                ...but I'm guessing that the 6 million or so officially unemployed people and the many adults who aren't part of the labor force might be up for doing farm work if it were something they knew about and was good enough to make it worth doing.

                You're guessing wrong then. There are millions of excellently paying jobs out there right now in the skilled trades and people would rather draw unemployment or drop out all together than take them. Picking crops for low wages? You wouldn't get more than half a dozen volunteers nationwide.

                Farmers get about 1/8 of each dollar spent at the grocery store, so to make food cost 10 times as much ("an order of magnitude") you'd need to multiply farmers' costs by 80.

                I don't think you get how goods pricing works but compared to harvesting multiple fields in a day in an expensive machine, hand picking could very well do just that even if you could find all the millions of people wanting to do it. They're not going to take even minimum wage and we pay well below that for illegal pickers today on the crops that demand hand picking.

                Look, man, it's an idea that might be fun studying but at the moment it's most assuredly nothing but pie in the sky.

                --
                My rights don't end where your fear begins.
  • (Score: 1) by khallow on Saturday March 30 2019, @04:22AM

    by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Saturday March 30 2019, @04:22AM (#822221) Journal

    they are instead bringing in feed from elsewhere

    And they can bring out poo using the same general infrastructure. Sure, don't use semi trailers for both human quality food and animal manure, but these are problems of the same scale.

  • (Score: 2) by Reziac on Saturday March 30 2019, @04:34AM (3 children)

    by Reziac (2489) on Saturday March 30 2019, @04:34AM (#822228) Homepage

    Bandini would like to have a word with you... know where feedlot manure winds up? In Bandini's processing facility, being turned into nitrogen fertilizer.

    --
    And there is no Alkibiades to come back and save us from ourselves.
    • (Score: 3, Touché) by The Mighty Buzzard on Saturday March 30 2019, @10:52AM (2 children)

      by The Mighty Buzzard (18) Subscriber Badge <themightybuzzard@proton.me> on Saturday March 30 2019, @10:52AM (#822285) Homepage Journal

      ...know where feedlot manure winds up?

      Mostly in congressional seats.

      --
      My rights don't end where your fear begins.
      • (Score: 2) by Reziac on Saturday March 30 2019, @02:08PM

        by Reziac (2489) on Saturday March 30 2019, @02:08PM (#822341) Homepage

        True, tho it's clear most of 'em have no idea. Others invest in high waders.

        --
        And there is no Alkibiades to come back and save us from ourselves.
      • (Score: -1, Troll) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 30 2019, @03:36PM

        by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 30 2019, @03:36PM (#822385)

        also found between your ears