Lack of sustainable agriculture: Biggest threat to the environment
Agriculture, the largest industry in the world, is also the biggest threat to the environment. Inefficient food production and harmful agriculture subsidies are causing deforestation, water shortages and pollution.
Agriculture wastes 60% or 1,500 trillion litres, of the 2,500 trillion litres of water it uses each year - this is 70% of the world’s accessible water
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Many big food producing countries like the US, China, India, Pakistan, Australia and Spain have reached, or are close to reaching, their renewable water resource limits.
The lack of sustainable agriculture harms the environment by sucking rivers, lakes and underground water sources dry, increasing soil salinity and thereby destroying its quality, and by washing pollutants and pesticides into rivers that in turn destroy downstream ecosystems such as corals and breeding grounds for fish in coastal areas.
The main causes are:
- leaky irrigation systems;
- wasteful field application methods;
- pollution by agri-chemicals; and
- cultivation of thirsty crops not suited to the environment.
The waste and pollution of water is made worse by misdirected subsidies, low public and political awareness of the crisis, and weak environmental legislation.
A WWF report,
Thirsty Crops: Agricultural Water Use and River Basin Conservation, identifies cotton, rice, sugar cane and wheat as the 'thirstiest' crops in 9 large river basins rich in biodiversity. Together, these 4 crops account for 58% of the world's irrigated farmland.