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Author Topic: Can the World Feed Itself? Historic Fertilizer Crunch Threatens Food Security  (Read 184 times)
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May 02, 2022, 06:47:29 PM
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.(Bloomberg) -- For the first time ever, farmers the world over — all at the same time — are testing the limits of how little chemical fertilizer they can apply without devastating their yields come harvest time. Early predictions are bleak.

In Brazil, the world’s biggest soybean  producer, a 20% cut in potash use could bring a 14% drop in yields, according to industry consultancy MB Agro. In Costa Rica, a coffee cooperative representing 1,200 small producers sees output falling as much as 15% next year if the farmers miss even one-third of normal application. In West Africa, falling fertilizer use will shrink this year’s rice and corn harvest by a third, according to the International Fertilizer Development Center, a food security non-profit group.

“Probably farmers will grow enough to feed themselves. But the question is what they will have to feed the cities,” said Patrice Annequin, a senior fertilizer market specialist for IFDC based in Ivory Coast. When you add increased hunger across West Africa on top of existing risks like terrorism, “this is absolutely dangerous for many governments in our region.

”For the billions of people around the world who don’t work in agriculture, the global shortage of affordable fertilizer likely reads like a distant problem. In truth, it will leave no household unscathed. In even the least-disruptive scenario, soaring prices for synthetic nutrients will result in lower crop yields and  higher grocery-store prices for everything from milk to beef to packaged foods for months or even years to come across the developed world. And in developing economies already facing high levels of food insecurity? Lower fertilizer use risks engendering malnutrition, political unrest and, ultimately, the otherwise avoidable loss of human life.

“I’m reducing the use of fertilizer in this crop cycle. I can’t afford such stratospheric prices,” Marcelo Cudia, 61, a farmer in the Philippines’ rice-producing region of Central Luzon, said outside the patch of land he’s been cultivating for the last 13 years. About 12,000 miles away, Brazilian soybean farmer Napoleão Rutilli is facing the same tough choices. “If fertilizers are expensive, we’ll use less fertilizers. If we’ll use less, we’ll produce less,” said the second-generation farmer, 33. “Food prices will increase and everyone will suffer.”

Why Are Fertilizer Prices Going Up?

Commercial farmers rely on a combination of three key nutrients — nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium — to fuel their harvests. Those inputs have always been key, but it was only about a century ago that humanity learned to manufacture mass-produced ammonia-based nutrients. The discovery of the Haber-Bosch method in the early 1900s, which is still used to make fertilizer today, has allowed farmers to vastly increase their yields. The agriculture industry has since come to depend on — even hinge on — man-made fertilizer. Although soil’s needs are different region to region, the general trend is pretty undisputed: More fertilizer use brings more food production.But as costs for synthetic nutrients have skyrocketed — in North America, one  gauge of prices is nearly triple where it was at the start of the pandemic — farmers have had to start paring back use, sometimes dramatically. That’s put the world in uncharted territory.



Image link:  https://i.ibb.co/jWPSwkM/runaway-fertilizer-prices.png

“Fertilizer prices are up an average of 70% from last year,” said Timothy Njagi, a researcher at the Tegemeo Institute of Agricultural Policy and Development in Kenya, referring to prices in the country. “The fertilizer is available locally, but it’s out of reach for the majority of farmers. Worse, many farmers know that they cannot recover these costs.

”Prices have been climbing for more than a year for a host of reasons: runaway pricing for natural gas, the main feedstock for much of the world’s nitrogen fertilizer; sanctions on a major Belarusian potash producer; back-to-back late-summer storms on the U.S. Gulf Coast that temporarily shut-in production in the region; plus Covid-19 restrictions that have disrupted every global supply chain, including chemicals.

That tightening in the physical fertilizer market has galvanized China, the largest phosphate producer, to restrict outgoing shipments in order to build up a stockpile at home, further exacerbating the global shortage. Add Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which  effectively cut off nearly a fifth of the world’s nutrient exports, and the fertilizer industry and its pricing mechanisms are arguably more broken than ever before.

“Fertilizer sales are very, very low, to the point of desperately low, and this should be traditionally the busiest time of the year,” said Jo Gilbertson, head of fertilizer at Agricultural Industries Confederation, a U.K.-based trade association. “The seeds of the problem are being sown now.”

How Will Lower Fertilizer Use Hit Output?

“My biggest concern is that we end up with a very severe shortage of food in certain areas of the world,” Tony Will, the chief executive of the world’s largest nitrogen fertilizer company CF Industries Holdings Inc., said in a March interview.

In the Philippines, urea — a key nitrogenous fertilizer — is now about 3,000 pesos (about $57) per bag, and even more when transported to the fields. That’s more than three times the price at this time last year, said Roger Navarro, president of Philippine Maize Federation Inc. “Farmers will tend to decrease the usual fertilizer dose of their crop and that will lessen the production,” he said, forecasting a 10% drop in yields. “It is rather sad, but this is reality.”

The yield outlook is even worse elsewhere. Peru’s  agricultural industry is facing a deficit of 180,000 metric tons of urea, and output of staples such as rice, potatoes and corn could tumble as much as 40% unless more fertilizer becomes available. The International Rice Research Institute predicted crop yields could drop 10% in the next season, meaning there’ll be 36 million fewer tons of rice — enough to feed 500 million people. In Sub-Saharan Africa, food production could drop by about 30 million tons in 2022, equivalent to the food requirement of 100 million people, the IFDC said in December — and that forecast was made before the war in Ukraine pushed prices to new records this spring.

There’s also a growing concern less fertilizer use will result in lower-quality crops. Just ask Gary Millershaski, who farms nearly 4,000 acres of wheat and roughly 3,000 acres of corn and sorghum in southwest Kansas. Also chairman of the Kansas Wheat Commission, Millershaski said the commission’s “biggest fear” this spring is that farmers may have skipped applying nitrogen as the wheat emerged from winter dormancy several weeks ago. If they did, it could hurt protein content of the grain and result in a “lower class of wheat.”

With nearly half of U.S. wheat exported to other countries, that’s a problem that will impact consumers the world over. The harvesting of hard red winter wheat, the most widely grown class in the U.S. and the grain that’s used to make all-purpose flour, will begin in June.

How Will Lower Fertilizer Use Hit Inflation?

Without a doubt, the food that is produced will be more expensive. Global food prices are already surging at the fastest pace ever as the war in Ukraine hits crop supplies, with a United Nations index of world food costs  soaring another 13% in March.

“Food security is in peril,” Philippines Agriculture Secretary William Dar said in a text message to Bloomberg News.Rising food prices, without a corresponding increase in incomes, have a long history of triggering social unrest. In 2008 and 2011, soaring inflation triggered food riots in more than 30 nations across Asia, the Middle East and Africa, helping to fuel uprisings in the Arab Spring.

“That’s the big concern: Will the high prices of food have a boomerang reaction?” said Gideon Negedu, executive secretary of the Fertilizer Producers and Suppliers Association of Nigeria and a member of the Presidential Fertilizer Initiative. “The food markets may begin to react to these prices because there is no commensurate increase in average household incomes.”

What Can Farmers Do?

Farmers aren’t sitting idly by. Those who managed to secure fertilizer ahead of the latest run-up are being more  strategic about how much they use, including leaning into “precision agriculture.” That means collecting more data on their fields, monitoring crops for increased efficiency and rolling out other data analysis tools. Farmers are increasingly testing soil for lingering nutrients and applying exactly as much fertilizer is needed, rather than an overly generous ballpark — a practice that’s been in use across some places like the U.S. and parts of Brazil for decades but isn’t yet commonplace in some other parts of the word.

If a soil tests high for phosphorous or potassium, “often little to no fertilizer is needed at all,” said Carrie Laboski, professor and extension soil scientist at University of Wisconsin-Madison. For some crops like corn, growers might apply a little bit of “starter fertilizer” when they’re planting, which is like insurance if soils are testing high for crop nutrients. When it comes to nitrogen, “they shouldn't eliminate it, but cut back,” she said.

Some farms are also exploring controlled-release formulations, like tiny capsules of nutrients that dissolve slowly over time. Although not a solution for many commercial farms given their large scales, others are exploring alternatives to chemical fertilizers, including animal waste.

“Compost and sewage sludge and biosolids or organic nutrients become more valuable,” said Mark Topliff, lead analyst for farm economics at the Agriculture and Horticulture Development Board in the U.K. “The supply of those has been stretched” as more growers turn to alternatives.

Some farmers are even  moving away from high-fertilizer crops altogether, like corn, in favor of lower-demand plantings like beans.

Tregg Cronin, a U.S. farmer in central South Dakota who chooses between growing wheat, corn, sunflowers, oats and soybeans, has found himself in an enviable situation: Drought last year left Cronin’s soil with excess nitrogen. So he’s opting to plant 10% more acres of sunflowers — which need the nitrogen more than soybeans do. But if fertilizer prices stay high in the months ahead, next year he’ll pivot to more soybeans. Others are making similar calculations — and hoping they’re betting in the right direction.

“If you really want to play 3D chess,” he said, “you need to be thinking about your rotation next year more so than this year.”


https://www.bloombergquint.com/politics/farmers-are-struggling-to-keep-up-food-supply-as-fertilizer-prices-surge


....


I have to admit economic doom and gloom in 2022 is looking a little different from typical "the sky is falling" content we see published every year. They say alternatives are already being explored in an effort to avert crisis. As someone who follows current events and the news, I've read about food riots abroad for many years. Not much is being said about these topics and what steps might be taken to minimize their impact. In nations like africa, it was normalized for humanitarian groups to work with local rural communities to grow food and crops, in an effort to minimize food scarcity. I'm not certain a similar approach is viable for the western world given population trends towards densely populated cities.

Populations in the united states and india have doubled from the 1950s to the present. While the amount of arable land in the world has decreased annually. Population growth coupled with declining global farmland could imply we were destined for a correction of some type eventually. Hopefully we can have a clean and smooth transition, rather than an uncomfortable one. If such becomes necessary.
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May 02, 2022, 06:56:45 PM
 #2

It will be easy for big countries to feed themselves. Countries with a large area have different climates at the same time and can grow different vegetables and fruits. But small countries will be bad. Especially if their soil is not fertile. An important role is played by the presence of rivers and lakes with fresh water. Some countries will never be able to feed themselves, they need trade.

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May 02, 2022, 08:11:07 PM
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in my own country, the price of fertilizer keeps on rising. and the limited supply of fertilizers becomes a very difficult problem for non-creative farmers. what's more, the price of crop yields does not increase following the increase in fertilizer prices. making farmers unable to make a lot of profit.

but lately many smart farmers have emerged who make their own fertilizers from natural ingredients. so they use less of the chemical fertilizers they buy. without compromising crop quality.
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May 02, 2022, 08:30:11 PM
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...but lately many smart farmers have emerged who make their own fertilizers from natural ingredients. so they use less of the chemical fertilizers they buy. without compromising crop quality.

Yes it is better to produce organic manure than using chemical fertilizers for farming. Countries with fertile lands can easily achieve this if they are willing to put in the effort. The problem is nowadays, people are so dependant on already processed stuff that they don't want to engage in doing such things.
In countries with enough farm lands they can engage in shifting cultivation.

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May 03, 2022, 12:06:09 AM
 #5

...but lately many smart farmers have emerged who make their own fertilizers from natural ingredients. so they use less of the chemical fertilizers they buy. without compromising crop quality.

Yes it is better to produce organic manure than using chemical fertilizers for farming. Countries with fertile lands can easily achieve this if they are willing to put in the effort. The problem is nowadays, people are so dependant on already processed stuff that they don't want to engage in doing such things.
In countries with enough farm lands they can engage in shifting cultivation.
Well said, it is good to get into organic farming. Same time we need to analyse the prevailing condition of the country in terms of requirement as well as economic situation. In recent days Sri Lanka suffered a big failure out of the organic farming experiment. If the natural resource endowment of the country cannot feed the entire population through organic produce, it should be ready to import. Sri Lanka got into such situation and wasn't able to import due to debts. Now countries around are sending rice and necessary things.

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May 03, 2022, 12:43:08 AM
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...but lately many smart farmers have emerged who make their own fertilizers from natural ingredients. so they use less of the chemical fertilizers they buy. without compromising crop quality.

Yes it is better to produce organic manure than using chemical fertilizers for farming. Countries with fertile lands can easily achieve this if they are willing to put in the effort. The problem is nowadays, people are so dependant on already processed stuff that they don't want to engage in doing such things.
In countries with enough farm lands they can engage in shifting cultivation.
yes indeed my country is a fertile country. even if you stick a stick in the dirt road. then the wooden stick will grow shoots. (This is just a proverb in my country so proud of the fertility of the soil in my country) . Then the use of organic fertilizers is a good solution. there are even big companies that produce this organic fertilizer on a large scale.

Well said, it is good to get into organic farming. Same time we need to analyse the prevailing condition of the country in terms of requirement as well as economic situation. In recent days Sri Lanka suffered a big failure out of the organic farming experiment. If the natural resource endowment of the country cannot feed the entire population through organic produce, it should be ready to import. Sri Lanka got into such situation and wasn't able to import due to debts. Now countries around are sending rice and necessary things.
Well that's right. Not all countries can apply organic fertilizers. Because soil structure and soil PH levels also vary within a country. There is a country's soil that contains too much acid and it is difficult to manage. Moving land periodically may be possible.

And one important thing in the use of organic fertilizers is that the results cannot be seen instantly like chemical fertilizers. Moreover, the soil is already accustomed to chemical fertilizers. So it is necessary to fertilize the soil first with EM4 liquid spray and it takes time before it is replanted.

I myself studied organic fertilizer inspired by EM4 which was discovered by scientists from Japan
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May 03, 2022, 02:35:26 AM
 #7

farming should no longer be limited to farms only. We need to grow our food at home. With the shrinking farming lands, it becomes imperative tnat we need to farm for ourselves on rooftops in balconies,  We need to use hydroponics, We need to do vertical farming. Grow your own food and stay secure. This is the only solution I see to this crisis. We need to be creative, we need to  use science
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May 03, 2022, 03:03:38 AM
 #8

Yes it’s crazy what is happening and what is worse for farmers is also the price of diesel. Even though crude oil is around $100 the price of diesel in many prices is at ATH due to the war in Europe.

Something to do with the cold spring climate and how diesel is used for heating instead of natural gas which Russia is not supplying. So in many parts of the country price of diesel is very expensive and most farm machinery needs diesel.

Went to Costco the other day and found out that they want $20 CAD for a Watermelon, crazy pricing.
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May 03, 2022, 10:31:54 AM
 #9



Populations in the united states and india have doubled from the 1950s to the present. While the amount of arable land in the world has decreased annually. Population growth coupled with declining global farmland could imply we were destined for a correction of some type eventually. Hopefully we can have a clean and smooth transition, rather than an uncomfortable one. If such becomes necessary.

Like you have pointed to this. The major challenge of agriculture is population growth and the various government seem not to worry about this. I will not go to the suggestion of birth control because of food but that government need more action on that aspect to secure food for its people. Also the fact land availability for agriculture is not not increasing but getting destroyed because of war, erosion, excavation etc is the worrisome aspect.
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May 03, 2022, 11:16:06 AM
 #10

Food prices are going up and there's nothing we can do about it.
The farmers will find ways to optimize their production costs and efficiency,but the food prices won't get cheaper.We just have to find a way to survive.
There's lots of untouched good soil in my country,but the farmers don't want to use it,because the agricultural property is divided into multiple small parts and the government isn't providing enough financial incentive for them to rent and use that land.
Many countries in Africa and Latin America will have a hard time feeding their growing population.
I can't figure out a fast and effective solution to this problem."Food immigration" might become a thing in the upcoming decades.

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May 03, 2022, 01:33:08 PM
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Food prices are going up and there's nothing we can do about it.
The farmers will find ways to optimize their production costs and efficiency,but the food prices won't get cheaper.We just have to find a way to survive.
There's lots of untouched good soil in my country,but the farmers don't want to use it,because the agricultural property is divided into multiple small parts and the government isn't providing enough financial incentive for them to rent and use that land.
Many countries in Africa and Latin America will have a hard time feeding their growing population.
I can't figure out a fast and effective solution to this problem."Food immigration" might become a thing in the upcoming decades.

In some cases where winter is present in their season, they need trades from different places of the world. Maybe they will survive but for how long? Good thing I lived in a tropical country, which we only have rainy and or sunny season. As for fertilizers, local farmers here are using any methods to keep their soil fertile if it is not, using decomposed vegetables to animal dung. The water supply is also great so we can barely manage to survive even those fertilizers' price would sky rocket. Most of our soil here are fertilize naturally, even backyards do have their own mini farm. In my family's case we have acres of land in our mothers name and the soils are great with rivers beside it. It was a coconut plantation back then until pest have eaten them, so they are most rubbers but I am planning to convert them to mangos or other trees that are fruits like avocados and such.

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May 03, 2022, 02:00:43 PM
 #12

I have to admit economic doom and gloom in 2022 is looking a little different from typical "the sky is falling" content we see published every year. They say alternatives are already being explored in an effort to avert crisis.

The world is definitely not in a good shape right now but pretty sure that we are going to avert food crisis if economic sector is back to where it was before all these covid and war situation. Anyway, small amount of people seems to go with organic farming so in the future this could be a solution in the future if somehow fertilizers becoming not viable due to their cost anymore

Hopefully we can have a clean and smooth transition, rather than an uncomfortable one. If such becomes necessary.

We are definitely moving to that direction right now especially with this war issue. Its pretty vague at the moment what will happened after Putin got his hands on Ukraine because if he decided to move forward then we are going to have an uncomfortable food shortage transition.

 
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May 03, 2022, 03:18:04 PM
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Sure we can, I love traveling, it's my hobby and I have visited many places. In some poor countries, the villages are almost empty because of their very low quality of life and lack of technics to make the job easier but some people still live there, they mostly produce and enjoy organic foods.

We have left behind that lifestyle. Can we return back? Yes, that's possible and impossible at the same time. It's possible because everyone can work to feed themselves and it doesn't require a high school degree or much intellect. But it will stop the development of science, engineering, informational technologies, it will stop the progress of every field because if we have to feed ourselves, then how will we be able to work? The progress of agriculture is what led us to spend more time on other things.

Also, I said that it's impossible to return back to that lifestyle because science is on another level today and it can even jump higher in the agriculture sector if there is huge pressure and of course lack of food can seriously increase the pressure on scientists. Remember that good old joke, there would be a cure for baldness in a pill if women had that.

It's sad but poor countries with a lack of technical resources and education will be seriously affected.

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May 03, 2022, 04:07:48 PM
 #14

Sure we can, I love traveling, it's my hobby and I have visited many places. In some poor countries, the villages are almost empty because of their very low quality of life and lack of technics to make the job easier but some people still live there, they mostly produce and enjoy organic foods.

We have left behind that lifestyle. Can we return back? Yes, that's possible and impossible at the same time. It's possible because everyone can work to feed themselves and it doesn't require a high school degree or much intellect. But it will stop the development of science, engineering, informational technologies, it will stop the progress of every field because if we have to feed ourselves, then how will we be able to work? The progress of agriculture is what led us to spend more time on other things.

Also, I said that it's impossible to return back to that lifestyle because science is on another level today and it can even jump higher in the agriculture sector if there is huge pressure and of course lack of food can seriously increase the pressure on scientists. Remember that good old joke, there would be a cure for baldness in a pill if women had that.

It's sad but poor countries with a lack of technical resources and education will be seriously affected.


In my opinion, a return to subsistence farming is impossible.  

The production of agricultural products without the use of modern technologies is unprofitable.  Such agricultural products will be very expensive.  Only very rich people can afford it.  

There are about 8 billion people on planet Earth today.  This is a huge number of people.  

To provide all these people with quality food, it is necessary to use the most modern technologies in agriculture.  

Humanity has no way back.  Mankind must move forward along the path of technological progress.

 
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May 03, 2022, 09:28:10 PM
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With the supply chain issues underlying the war related cost increases, it just means that the developed war will pay more of their income for food, while under developed nations will experience food shortages. Usually the developed world will come out on top because they have the resources to invest into alternatives. Poor people in developed nations don't have access to that luxury.
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May 03, 2022, 09:37:58 PM
 #16

With the supply chain issues underlying the war related cost increases, it just means that the developed war will pay more of their income for food, while under developed nations will experience food shortages. Usually the developed world will come out on top because they have the resources to invest into alternatives. Poor people in developed nations don't have access to that luxury.
Supply chain issues truly have a big role when food is being imported. Here the countries with good wealth usually find way for it whereas poor countries suffering for food is taking place around. In most cases countries need to first allocate funds for food on their budgets than allocating for military arms purchasing.

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May 04, 2022, 07:53:27 AM
 #17



Populations in the united states and india have doubled from the 1950s to the present. While the amount of arable land in the world has decreased annually. Population growth coupled with declining global farmland could imply we were destined for a correction of some type eventually. Hopefully we can have a clean and smooth transition, rather than an uncomfortable one. If such becomes necessary.

Like you have pointed to this. The major challenge of agriculture is population growth and the various government seem not to worry about this. I will not go to the suggestion of birth control because of food but that government need more action on that aspect to secure food for its people. Also the fact land availability for agriculture is not not increasing but getting destroyed because of war, erosion, excavation etc is the worrisome aspect.

in my country land continues to decrease because it is made into factories. even the mountains are leveled using heavy equipment.

and after the mountain is leveled, that is, it is drilled into the depths of the soil and cement is taken for building materials. even the sound of the explosion of the bidamite was often heard from the ground.


I am very concerned about this condition. people in my country have even stopped farming and prefer to work in newly established factories.

this happens because many farmers are not benefited in my country. where fertilizer prices continue to rise but crop yields do not increase. and the farmers also stopped raising livestock because the price of feed was very expensive while the price of meat did not increase significantly. making farmers lose money.

while the state continues to import food ingredients from abroad and this further exacerbates the price of agricultural produce from local farmers which is becoming increasingly cheaper. because the market has been flooded with agricultural products from abroad.
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May 04, 2022, 11:51:47 AM
 #18

Yes to an extent, as there is nothing too big nor impossible.
Isn't it high time we start growing our own food ? Close to our homes, by the side of our homes or getting a portion of land if possible.
With the population of nations growing very high most government care less about all of that, so I think it's high time we take actions for ourselves as we can't buy everything from the general market's.

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May 04, 2022, 03:00:47 PM
 #19

in my country, here farmers are starting to use organic fertilizers which are cheaper to get ... the price of chemical fertilizers is getting higher, making farmers switch to using organic fertilizers which are cheaper and easier to get .. they can even produce it from home
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May 04, 2022, 05:17:00 PM
 #20

The absence of an enhanced explanation with the pictures will make everything that is written without a person who does not have the experience of agriculture in the past, but it is difficult to do so in the courtyard of the house because the agriculture itself not only consumes an area, but also oxygen and a specific atmosphere and it will be impossible if you live in an apartment in a building consisting of Several floors.

The best what you can get is Vertical farms

Source: https://delawarebusinesstimes.com/news/vertical-farms-envisioned-as-path-out-of-recidivism/
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