Closing the Loop: How Ancient History and Microbial Science Can Help Solve Today's Fertilizer Crisis
Closing the Loop: How Ancient History and Microbial Science Can Help Solve Today's Fertilizer Crisis Across several West African nations, smallholders and agricultural communities are facing an uphill battle. A severe shortage of imported synthetic fertilizers, driven by volatile global supply chains and skyrocketing costs, has left farmers searching for viable alternatives to keep their soil productive. To find a resilient solution, we don't necessarily need to look forward to high-tech, expensive inputs. Instead, we can look back—and down—at a highly sophisticated, multi-millennial recycling loop that sustained one of the most enduring agricultural systems in human history. The Forty-Century Precedent When Western agricultural scientists traveled through East Asia in the early 20th century, they were stunned by a remarkable paradox: fields that had been farmed continuously for over 4,000 years were still incredibly fertile, showing no signs of soil depletion. Th...