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Zero Tillage: Why the Grass Is Greener on Brazil's Side PDF Print E-mail
2007 - February 2007
Written by Bernardo Esteves   
Wednesday, 14 February 2007 17:52

Zero Tillage: a Brazilian green revolutionBrazil's large farms have long pioneered a green cultivation technique that boosts growth. Now its small farmers - and possibly the rest of the world - are following suit. The method is called direct drilling, no-tillage or zero tillage (ZT). The technique is in part praised for fixing carbon in the soil, thereby reducing the amount of carbon dioxide - a greenhouse gas - released into the air. It also prevents soil erosion and therefore demands less irrigation.

Brazil has been a major pioneer of the technique since the country adopted it in the 1970s. But its small farmers have been lagging behind, mainly hindered by the high costs of specialized planting machines needed for ZT.

Now, thanks to cheaper seeding machines and efforts by farming organizations and individual agronomists, small farmers are spreading the word.

ZT Boom

Essentially, ZT consists of seeding uncultivated soil, as well as rotating crops and constantly covering the soil with crop residues (the parts that remain in the field after harvest).

Preventing the soil from being bare has several advantages. It protects the land from heavy rain, leaves cleaner surface waters and helps recharge aquifers - permeable stone layers that supply much of the world's water.

It also cuts soil erosion by up to 90%, allowing for 30-60% greater rainfall infiltration so less water is needed for irrigation.

In addition, crop residues boost the soil's organic content and help fix carbon in it. so that ZT reduces carbon dioxide emissions far more than conventional techniques.

"With the best systems you have over a ton of carbon sequestered [in the soil] per hectare per year. When you consider there are a hundred million hectares under ZT in the world, this is an awful lot of carbon dioxide taken out of the atmosphere," says British agronomist John Landers, who has promoted the technology in Brazil since the 1970s.

Today, after the United States, Brazil has the second largest area cultivated using ZT - some 25.5 million hectares, or more than 60% of the country's cultivated surface. Although ZT was initially tested in the United Kingdom, it was the United States who adopted and further developed it in the early 1960s.

The practice was first introduced to Brazil to combat soil erosion. In 1972, Herbert Batz was the first farmer to import ZT-adapted seeding machines in Latin America. "He encouraged me and other neighbors to do the same," recalls Manoel Henrique Pereira, a pioneer of ZT adoption in Brazil.

Farmer-to-farmer word of mouth then fueled ZT's spread throughout Brazil - there was little reliance on government subsidies. In 1979, the creation of a farmers' club to further the technology was the first step of many. There are now nearly 50 such clubs in Brazil, led by the National Federation of Zero Tillage into Crop Residues (FEBRAPDP).

But the real ZT boom came in the 1990s. The area farmed using the technique reached a million hectares in 1991 - 2.6% of Brazil's cultivated area at the time - and has been growing exponentially ever since.

Between 1991 and 2004, Brazil increased its grain production from 57.8 million tons to 125 million tons from a cultivated area of 42 million hectares, 22 million of which was under ZT.

This is also the period ZT began to gain favor in the Brazilian central savannahs - the cerrado.

Savior of Savannahs and Forests

While ZT was easy to apply in the humid subtropical southern states, where winter rains allow two harvests a year, the arid cerrado posed a greater challenge. The six-month dry season allows only one annual harvest, which halves the amount of grass and crop residues available to cover the soil.

The problem was solved by growing a tropical pasture alongside the main crop. Following the harvest, this grass is used to feed farm animals. When the rainy season returns, the grass is killed by herbicides and used to cover the soil where the next crop is planted. According to Landers, the herbicides used in ZT (mainly glyphosate) are among the most environment-friendly available.

The result is that soils severely eroded by years of grazing, and usually abandoned, can now be used to grow pasture again - and without any fertilizer.

"We have 16 million hectares of pasture in the cerrado, 70% of which are degraded. Now we can plant good maize or soybean crops on these and go back to top quality pastures after three years, which is a real breakthrough," says Landers, who founded the Zero Tillage Association for the Cerrado Region (APDC).

Meanwhile, in the heart of the cerrado, a team from the French International Cooperation Center for Agronomic Research (CIRAD) has been leading key work in adapting ZT technology for dry regions. The team has, for instance showed the benefits of planting a certain grass species (Brachiaria ruziziensis) alongside the main crop. As well as being easier than other species used as crop residues to control with herbicides, its long roots - up to two meters - allow it to take up more groundwater.

Introducing ZT to the cerrado has also slowed down deforestation, as farmers are less likely to cut down trees to open up new pastures.

"ZT has saved the cerrado," says CIRAD agronomist Serge Bouzinac. "If it hadn't been adopted, this region would have become a huge pasture and many farmers would have extended the deforestation frontier in the Amazon even further."

Spreading ZT

But ZT requires an investment from the farmer, who needs to buy specialized machines for planting and spreading the fertilizer on cover crops. As a result, small farmers have been left out of the ZT boom, and remain an important challenge for its spread.

In 2005, according to FEBRAPDP, small farmers used ZT on 600,000 hectares, while medium and large farmers applied it to 24.9 million hectares.

This might be changing, however, thanks to increasingly cheaper manual and animal-powered planting machines, as well as projects to train farmers. An initiative by APDC expects to teach ZT techniques to as many as 38,500 small farmers in the cerrado.

John Landers considers the initiative a success, with over 150 field demonstrations and 480 technicians trained so far.

"Farmers are accepting this animal traction technology because they all have horses or oxen, and this makes them independent instead of having to wait for the neighbor's tractor to prepare land and plant for them," he says. "This way they plant earlier, harvest more, renovate their pasture at the same time and don't have to pay third parties for tractor hire."

A greater challenge would be to aim for the global spread of ZT. According to data gathered by German agronomist Rolf Derpsch, who has promoted ZT in South America since the 1970s, 47% of the area cultivated using ZT in the world is in South America - mainly Brazil, Argentina and Paraguay. Another 39% is in North America, 9% in Australia and only 3.9% is in the rest of the world.

Brazilian farmers and researchers have an important role to play in spreading the word. People like Manoel Henrique Pereira have done so for years, travelling worldwide to share their experience and technical advice. "I have been to over 20 countries to promote ZT adoption," says Pereira, whose next destination is Laos.

CIRAD is also spreading its technology to small farmers abroad, notably in Cameroon, Cambodia and Vietnam. "Brazil has much to show other developing countries," says Derpsch. "I'm convinced that [ZT] can be very effectively used in South-South cooperation."

The technology is expanding in Bangladesh, India, Nepal and Pakistan where 1.9 million hectares are currently cultivated using ZT - with great potential to save huge amounts of irrigation water.

Africa, however, is another story. The use of crop residues as cattle feed remains an obstacle, as this does not leave enough grass available for use in ZT. This problem will have to be solved if the technique is to be adopted in African nations.

But above all, adopting ZT requires open-mindedness, says Derpsch. "The mindset is the main barrier to no-till adoption in countries where deep-rooted traditions hinder the abandonment of tillage and the plough."

SciDev.Net



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Comments (9)Add Comment
Very much a revealing article of the truth....finally !
written by ch.c., February 15, 2007
- Brazil did not invent the ZT, but UK did first and then further developped in USA ! Just read every Brazilian articles pretending Brazil was the "inventor" of this technique ! Lies abound everywhere....in Brazil !
- In the same thousands of Brazilian articles, published all over the world, it says that Brazil has by far the most hectares in ZT and other countries start to copy the brazilian ZT technique..
Looks like another Brazilian lie and cheating as per the above article, as the USA have more hectares in ZT than Brazil.
- Curious conclusion for Africa for crop residues and cattles. Has Brazil not the largest herd of cattles ?????? smile
- And if ZT is so good for the soil why has Brazil 100 millions hectares of degraded and unprofitable pastures and "only"
25 millions hectares in ZT ????????
- Interesting to know also that a German and not a Brazilian promoted ZT originally in Brazil. Another truth explained differently in the Brazilian propaganda for ZT !!!!!!!!

Conclusion : in my view Brazilians exagerate the reality and the truth a little bit too much and lie a little bit too much !
And Brazilians caress their navel much more than they should, and they do it by lying and hiding and cheating everyone !

Hmmmmm......Brazilian mentality will never change !!!! So they are !
Ch
written by Savy, February 15, 2007
Why so much hate? What happened to you by a Brazilian that makes you automaticaly critisize Brazil? I don't understand why people wake uo, go to the blog and think they know something about Brazil. Now look at the article. It simply states that Brazil has ADOPTED ZT, there is no claim they invented it. It also says the US and other countries have adopted it.

Another Brazilian lie? What would the motivation be to lie. The President of the US lied and there was a war that has killed thousand...now that was a whopper.

"And Brazilians caress their navel much more than they should, and they do it by lying and hiding and cheating everyone ! "

What the heck does this mean?

Who really cares about ZT and Brazilian soil anyway, if you get so worked up about this silly article there must be something very wrong in your life. Have a nice day.


...
written by Ric, February 15, 2007
Large rice farms south of Chico, California have been using this technique for generations. One of them sent an associate to northern Brazil in the early 1970´s. The California farmers use this field method and other natural methods to produce brown organic rice which is healthier. Also demands a premium price.

What the Californian found interesting was that in order to produce rice that was less perishable and was what Brazilians like to eat, all the brown coating on the rice is ground off (farelo), leaving a hard white kernal which has almost no food value compared to the brown kernal which has lost only the skin. Naturally it takes different machinery to accomplish this.
Remember: It is all about making money
written by Osvaldo Coelho, February 15, 2007
Pioneering a technique -any technique- is developing such technique and empolying it massively. Let me give you an example: Defunct USSR invented a lot of technology realted to pouktry and handed them out to Cuba. Cuba could not develop that into mass market. Brazil took those technologies and developed and pioneered them.
Inventing something, or taking the pure3 science approach, may give you some glamour and bragginf rights and even tghe odd Nobel Prize. The rewards of such effort, is takne by the ones who pioneer the technicques and develop them into mass markets.

Remember: It is all about making money. No one would dispute the high level of technology of the UK but if we think agriculture, we don't think the UK. The UK invented a lot of things, we are thankfull for them, but they are not exactly good at that, say footabll, or cricket, or Lawn tennis...
Fools!
written by Old one, February 16, 2007
These Brasilians are fools. They dont understand that they will fail in whatever they do. Atleast they should realise it, after visiting this site, and reading the comments posted by ch.c.

God has sent ch.c for the Brasilians. Stupid Brasilians dont realise it.

All Brasilians should be made to visit Brazzilcom every hour. They should be slapped on their asses, and made to read what ch.c has written by each passing hour. (Women should be made naked, while reading ---right ch.c?) .

All those who dont do the needfull, should be sent to iraq to die.

Lula should order to combine all comments oc ch.c and give it a form of a text book, and it should be included at all levels of education in Brasil. Thereafter wait.....keep visiting this site..for future advise from ch.c...... mercy..god has sent him to brasil...let no words of his go waste...
Dumb
written by GTY, February 16, 2007
Hey Ch,C, I see you have added a new name uder which to post...have fun "Old One".
To Savy !!!!!
written by ch.c., February 23, 2007
You just demonstrated how little your readings are !!!!
I did not say that Brazil pretend to have invented ZT in the above article, but in hundreds and probably thousands of other articles !!!!
They are published ALL OVER the places.....just surf the Net !

Thus I dont hate Brazilians, I love them in fact. But Brazilians just exaggerate everything
they do or invented.
The same could be true for the flex fuel engine, the pride of Brazilians ! right ??????

Sorry, the invention was made by BOSCH, a German company, that even get an award and recognition from the Brazilian Minister of Science and Technology !!!!!!!!!
And when you read in many Brazilians articles that the invention was made by Brazilian engineers....it is simply another lie.....as usual !
innovation
written by j.o.h.n.n.y, March 03, 2007
The japanese did not invent the VCR but they certainly did innovate it. A good idea is a good idea, doesn't matter where it comes from.
Flex Fuel by Bosh ? Really?
written by cricri "guest", May 04, 2007

De curiosidade fui olhar estes sites ai embaixo pra verificar se eu achava algo patenteado pela BOHS a respeito de sua invencao da tecnoloiga Flex Fuel. Talvez eu nao siaba procurar, mas acredito que se for memso invencao da BOSH, ela ja teria patenteado. Ou nao? Brasileiro exagera e os estrangeiros quando vem aqui percebem o qunato!!!! Maiores exportadores do mundo disso e daquilo....E a agricultura mais competitiva do mundo...Realmente e um exagero. Quant mentira nisso smilies/wink.gif
http://www.patentstorm.us/patents/search-results.html?search=BOSH&imageField2.x=11&imageField2.y=14

http://www.patentstorm.us/patents/search-results.html?search=Flex Fuel ethanol &imageField2.x=12&imageField2.y=13 smilies/cheesy.gif smilies/cheesy.gif

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