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Capable-Obligation57 t1_ir11qp8 wrote

Imo it should be land use vs production amount, not production value. This makes it seem like there’s more produced on less land when in fact it just shows the increase in its value

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[deleted] t1_ir13nzo wrote

A famine due to a crop failure might show as peak production (value)

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rachel_tenshun t1_ir202x1 wrote

Or, say the 1st and 3rd largest distributors of grain are engaged in a disastrous war, trigging a global food crisis.

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johnnyringo1985 t1_ir2q5gj wrote

Or it would neglect the more land-intensive production of organic foods, cage free eggs, etc that require more land but produce more value for consumers seeking those statuses.

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Potato_Octopi t1_ir1aznc wrote

Sure, but that's probably not an easy index to compile. Different crops will yield different volume or weight per acre.

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Yrrebnot t1_ir1r3vq wrote

You can do it by calorie.

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codybevans t1_ir2ppd8 wrote

That wouldn’t really work. An acre of rice has something like 4 times the calories of an acre of wheat.

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jrad18 t1_ir3pvtw wrote

Yeah but that would be an interesting comparison, it would show an improvement in the effectiveness of land use

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ProfitsOfProphets t1_ir4b7ts wrote

But only on that singular dimension. It doesn't take into consideration soil fertilization depletion, carbon sequestration, etc.

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raff7 t1_ir18k0z wrote

Although the value is in 2022 usd, so increased value caused by inflation is not a factor…

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danielv123 t1_ir2flwj wrote

Crop price inflation does not equal CPI though.

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tgwhite t1_ir2qyxo wrote

Should be hectares vs calories produced.

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Packmanjones t1_ir4gx78 wrote

The two lines will diverge wildly. My grandpa had a trophy his father won for growing 83 bushel per acre corn. These days 280 might get you a trophy

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Go_easy t1_ir3pfp1 wrote

I was going to say… I am a GIS analyst. I look at pictures of the earths surface everyday from as far back as I can find in many cases. There is no F’ing way we have reduced our farmland. Trust me, it has only expanded, thanks to modern tech like pivot irrigation.

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Hipser t1_ir4jbb9 wrote

money doesn't matter when global warming is running away.

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fuck_all_you_people t1_ir11fzv wrote

I know this looks like more efficiency, but in my anecdotal experience with a thousand acre farm in Iowa there is more to it. They are beating the shit out of the ground and planting the crop rows closer together. Fertilizer and pesticide use is through the roof. Crop rotation is down in favor of corn, and corn is brutal to the ground. The dirt is light and flaky now, it doesnt look like you could plant anything in it without a heavy dose of fertilizer.

I fear some of this is short term gain for long-term pain rather than we are improving our farming effectiveness.

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J_McJesky t1_ir1kcdk wrote

This is what's been going on for decades. Nebraska has been doing this PLUS draining the ogallala aquifer to irrigate corn for a generation. We know the aquifer is emptying at an alarming rate and the state government is just like "eh, I'm sure technology will save us someday in the future, PUMP MORE WATER!" Such a "fuck the kids" mentality and I just don't get it.....

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fuck_all_you_people t1_ir1kp5e wrote

Dustbowl Part II: Electric Bugaloo

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J_McJesky t1_ir1l2ob wrote

"But didn't you hear? There's a water CYCLE! obviously all this water will definitely refill the aquifer faster than we're emptying it EVENTUALLY!"

People are so stupid sometimes it makes me want to cry.....

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dtreth t1_ir72x21 wrote

Republicans. You just described them to a T.

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s0cks_nz t1_ir3tnd2 wrote

Imagine. The most advanced society to ever grace the solar system, and our food production technique has already decimated 30-50% of our top soil in just one human lifetime.

An agricultural system that will basically exhaust the planet's fertility in less than 200yrs (from the start of the green revolution) just seems monumentally stupid. But here we are. And that's not even mentioning what it's done to insect populations both above and below ground.

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Northstar1989 t1_ir4mz8o wrote

Thankfully, this kind of thing is self-limiting.

The more expensive crops become (due to diminishing usable topsoil) relative to the cost of things like fertilizer and hiring land use experts to advise on how to reduce erosion, the more these will be used.

Looking at any trend and projecting it infinitely into the future without change is always a terrible idea.

Feedback looks exist everywhere. Trends will generally either accelerate, or slow down and level off, with time.

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b-radly t1_ir1wi9c wrote

Ok but when has agricultural production been somehow less destructive?

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s0cks_nz t1_ir3uakq wrote

Amazon tribes and their creation of dark earth for their agricultural needs perhaps? Cover crops and green manure? No-till? Turning human waste into safe fertiliser?

There are plenty of options.

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b-radly t1_ir7lgvx wrote

Unfortunately I don’t know of any system that is on the sustainable side that could produce enough food to feed the population. It’s a real bummer. Anyway it’s a big topic.

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s0cks_nz t1_ir7s77m wrote

That's the downside of expanding your population on an unsustainable agricultural system. It's difficult to transition after the fact.

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mule_roany_mare t1_ir28u1b wrote

I think eventually there will be a revolution in robotic farming.

Make a 3D grid of alternately charged DC wires to both supply power & rails to robots.

Crops are currently optimized to the machinery which plants & harvests them. With extensible & flexible machinery there isn't even a reason to have a monocrop fields, you could grow 3 sisters as easily as corn if you wanted.

Denser & more varied crops would reduce the stress of pests and your drones running 24/7 could just mechanically kill most of them.

When you do need pesticide or fertilizer it can be applied directly, dramatically reducing runoff.

Same as water, you could just inject it into the ground around the roots a few oz at time. It probably takes 10 oz to get 1 oz where you actually need it.

The coolest benefit will be continual harvest, there is no need to plant & harvest the whole field at once. You can just pluck what is ready for market & plant where a spot opens up

You could have an orchard with a dozen different fruits & grow corn below them with beans & other viney plants using them both as structure. Below all that where there is no light you could grow mushrooms.

You'd ultimately be limited by light & that can be supplemented too.

Ending corn subsidies would do a ton of good too, It's amazing that artificially cheap corn has been shoe-horned into every part of our life. From corn syrup is everything to ethanol in our gas

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signmeupnot t1_ir2ig1o wrote

More tech is the most complicated and energy intensive solution

I think farmers need to become interested in ecology instead, and everyone with land should grow most of their own food.

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CharonsLittleHelper t1_ir3wak1 wrote

>and everyone with land should grow most of their own food.

Your vision for the future is subsistence farming? lol

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signmeupnot t1_ir4j2j5 wrote

Why is that laughable?

To me its astonishing that people happily spend a lot of free time in their gardens, growing lawns and non edible flowers, instead of food.

Progress doesn't have to be a world that looks like Bladerunner.

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CharonsLittleHelper t1_ir5rhn0 wrote

Because subsistence farming means being super inefficient and poor. Civilian is based upon specialized labor.

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signmeupnot t1_ir64fxa wrote

Haha no it doesn't. It's perfectly possible to grow all the veggies and fruit for a family on a small plot of land.

That doesn't necessarily mean that every single human being needs to do that, and there can be no broad scale farming under any circumstances.

But if millions started growing food themselves tomorrow, that would take a huge burden away from the environment.

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CharonsLittleHelper t1_ir6gtp2 wrote

I didn't say that it wasn't possible. I said it's inefficient.

If you want to grow vegetables as a hobby - go for it. Have fun. The return on your labor is terrible. You're lucky to get min wage relative to just buying the same vegetables at the grocery.

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signmeupnot t1_ir6mdd7 wrote

Inefficient in what sense?

I'm saying its possible and more than efficient. But you have to change your farming style to a more natural, ecological sound approach. Which means large monocultures are out, polycultures with perennials are in, as a start.

I don't know why you talk about wage and return like it's about running a farm solely for profit. Its not. Its about growing the food your family needs firstly.

If you design your land well, the amount of work after establishing is very little. Then the amount of yield you get vs. work hours is incomparable to buying all your food at the supermarket.

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CharonsLittleHelper t1_ir6mm86 wrote

In the sense of land use and labor. Monocultures are used because it's MORE efficient. Avoiding them will make it worse.

Are there drawbacks to monocultures? Sure. But they're efficient.

Are you an anti-GMO activist too?

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signmeupnot t1_ir6o4vf wrote

They are more efficient in the sense that few people can cultivate and harvest, they are people efficient you could say.

However, the constant plowing is bad for the soil, the energy input you need in the form of massive machinery and fuels is high, energy input for fertilizer is high, fungicides, pesticides, loss of biodiversity, transport of crops and its fuel inputs and on and on. And since it's all annuals, you have to do the same every year.

So the environment is paying the price, just so a few people can do massive acrages themselves. That so called efficiency is not sustainable.

No wonder conventional farming doesn't pay.

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CharonsLittleHelper t1_ir6og5o wrote

Right - so you need a ton of labor. Which makes it basically a horribly paid job/hobby - not economically beneficial. Which was my initial point you tried to dispute.

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signmeupnot t1_ir6ptxz wrote

You didn't read my reply then. As I said, the labor of establishing is only initially, and we are not talking a massive amount of labour. Once the perennials are in the ground, they do the work themselves for years to come.

And its like you don't understand, that what you grow yourself, you don't have to pay for at the Supermarket, those savings are your reward, among the joy of growing yourself and what other benefits that brings like more nutritious food.

Food is a big part of the paycheck for many people.

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CharonsLittleHelper t1_ir6qaap wrote

Yes - all of the world's farmers are dumb and wrong. If only you were in charge of the world...

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signmeupnot t1_ir6r63a wrote

I think I'll end the discussion here, as you are going for my person, instead of giving counterarguments to my points.

Just because millions of people are doing something, doesn't make it smart. I'll leave you with that

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Car-face t1_ir4b87n wrote

>With extensible & flexible machinery there isn't even a reason to have a monocrop fields, you could grow 3 sisters as easily as corn if you wanted.

You could probably do that today, but there's subsidies that make corn favourable in the US, and entire supply chains built around corn and it's by-products.

>Denser & more varied crops would reduce the stress of pests and your drones running 24/7 could just mechanically kill most of them.

>When you do need pesticide or fertilizer it can be applied directly, dramatically reducing runoff.

Inter-row cropping for pest control is already a part of Integrated Pest Management.

Similarly, you can do this already, but IPM is a better approach to reduced pesticide use. You still need to change the regime, rather than just the delivery method, to solve the problem.

>Same as water, you could just inject it into the ground around the roots a few oz at time. It probably takes 10 oz to get 1 oz where you actually need it.

I'm not sure where that 10:1 ratio for water comes from, but Partial Rootzone Drying is already a technique used in some crops, and can be achieved with current irrigation techniques. You don't need teams of drones to do what a black plastic tube can do.

>The coolest benefit will be continual harvest, there is no need to plant & harvest the whole field at once. You can just pluck what is ready for market & plant where a spot opens up

Harvest and planting regimes aren't just dictated by the field, it's dictated by the need to get multiple crops into a growing season, and minimise the transport cost after harvest. having drones pick a row of a field at a time won't necessarily provide any benefit; if anything it'll actually reduce the crop since you're delaying planting at the beginning of the season.

>You could have an orchard with a dozen different fruits & grow corn below them with beans & other viney plants using them both as structure. Below all that where there is no light you could grow mushrooms.

orchards with multiple fruits is achievable today; a lot of orchards still utilise manual fruit picking, so it's not necessarily any better to have drones in that respect. You could probably use drones or robotics to kill off a lot of jobs, though.

The problem with things like beans growing around corn under orchards is that the beans and corn won't grow, because you've put them under a canopy. You're now maintaining multiple crops but not getting yield or a healthy crop from any of them. Conditions favourable for mushrooms are likely to cause root rot or fungal problems for the corn, or have potential negative interactions with the larger plants, and controlling conditions between the orchard and the beans and corn and the mushrooms (and the nutrient requirements for all three) is likely to be impossible.

That's not to say that it's not possible for symbiotic relationships between fungi and plants to exist; mycorrhizae are a thing and they help water and nutrient uptake in the host plant, but again - this is something already done today, without robotics.

>You'd ultimately be limited by light & that can be supplemented too.

Apart from the horrendous cost of electricity that this would add, the light pollution that would result would be massive as well. To get the level of light required on an industrial scale to extend a growth period would just be enormous.

Then there's the general downside to all mechanisation, which is spoilage/mechanical damage that results from some machinery.

In Vineyards, mechanical harvesting shortens the lifespan of the vines because of how fucking brutal the machines are. Fruit has to be crushed almost immediately, because the berries inevitably split and become open to infection or early fermentation - both capable of destroying a crop.

In softer fruits, machines simply don't exist for harvesting crops - not because the technology isn't there, but because the fruit simply gets damaged too easily. Raspberries or strawberries have only in the last 5 years had machines developed capable of harvesting them - but a grid of drones isn't part of the solution.

Even with robots, unless we're talking 100% indoor hydroponic solutions, they're simply not delivering gains outside of the current system. They might provide gains by supplementing current mass production processes, but bulk approaches are still the way forward for yield. The main benefit would be miniaturisation of harvest machinery, lower costs, auto picking and the ability to harvest faster (and perhaps AI integration to identify ripeness).

I agree with ending corn subsidies, though. That would do more for a lot of the above than any drones.

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mule_roany_mare t1_ir4i20d wrote

>you could do that today

What kind of machinery can harvest 3 sisters?

Much less anything more complicated, or crops that don’t harvest at the same time.

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Car-face t1_ir4isxn wrote

sorry I don't mean 3 sisters specifically, but in general the preference for corn is driven by economic reasons beyond machinery capability.

More complicated crops that don't harvest at the same time are still limited by other factors like soil quality and nutrient availability as well - whilst those three crops specifically benefit being grown together, it's not necessarily more efficient (or suitable) in terms of land use across various crop types (although it's still better than just growing corn everywhere as a monocrop).

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s0cks_nz t1_ir3twnk wrote

At the rate we're going they'll need drones to pollinate crops as well.

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wildfire1983 t1_ir4gz8l wrote

The scene from The Matrix of the growing fields (where Neo learns from Morpheus that humans are cultivated/grown outside of the matrix) just popped in my head... Lol

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Mendicant__ t1_ir3hmlk wrote

Crop yields really are going up, promise

People are so hellbent on this being untrue, and I don't get it. Your other problems will still be there for you even if this one is better than you thought.

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Sininenn t1_ir3v7tb wrote

It's not that people are hellbent on this being untrue

It's that the metric chosen here is not the best way to describe efficiency, or the volume of crops grown and harvested, unlike the data you linked.

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Mendicant__ t1_ir541ly wrote

People are definitely claiming it's just price increases/cash value and that production hasn't actually gone up.

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Sininenn t1_ir54mt2 wrote

Some people, myself included, are claiming that this data representation could also be explained using just that justification, and that therefore, it's not a good one.

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dtreth t1_ir72o1m wrote

It IS explained using that justification, you just are not knowledgable enough to understand it.

Interesting manifestation of the Dunning-Kruger effect here.

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Hipser t1_ir4joik wrote

the real burning issue is using most of that land for animal feed. it takes vast amounts of water and uses up 100x the weight of crops per final meat food. we collectively have to eat far less animal.

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monosodiumg64 t1_ir50762 wrote

>the real burning issue is using most of that land for animal feed. it takes vast amounts of water and uses up 100x the weight of crops per final meat food..

Not sure any of those points are correct.

On the water point, most sources that claim animal feed takes up huge amounts of water are including rainwater, which is not "used" in the sense of "was available for other uses but no longer is because it was used up in growing crops". In fact almost all that rainwater runs off or evaporates, which it would have done whatever that land was use for.

>100x

Source? I ask because the range I usually see is 4x to 10x.

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Hipser t1_ir7t6oa wrote

Twenty-six percent of the Planet's ice-free land is used for livestock grazing and 33 percent of croplands are used for livestock feed production

https://www.greenpeace.org.uk/news/why-meat-is-bad-for-the-environment/

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monosodiumg64 t1_ir95bb6 wrote

That's Greenpeace. Was a fan in the anti-whaling days but they were real environmentalists in those days. Now they are a propaganda org pushing ideological positions instead of the environment. They lie and distort freely to support their causes. Not a credible source in anything.

Tip: look not just for sources aligned with your beliefs, look also for sources with different biases.

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Hipser t1_ir9mfad wrote

there are billions of environmentalists living under capitalism.

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mule_roany_mare t1_ir2747i wrote

How much is improved yield & how much is increased prices?

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UnhingedRedneck t1_ir2az4p wrote

Actually over the long run cereals tend to lag behind inflation and have stayed relatively the same for many years. Improvements in agriculture have allowed farmers to produce more grain on the same amount of land without depreciating the soil of nutrients. This doesn’t apply to all forms of farming and I can only speak for grains as I have never farmed anything else.

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Mr_Mammoth-man t1_ir3e3p3 wrote

The graph has converted everything to 2022 US dollars, so any inflation, or as you put it increased prices, has been discounted. So, this is mainly from increased yield.

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Gelmy t1_ir3pvi5 wrote

That's not accurate. Increased prices does not necessarily equate to inflation. There are a thousand potential causes of price fluctuations that aren't inflation.

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Dr_barfenstein t1_ir3vs2x wrote

Literally the growing middle class of Asia and their increased demand for meat. Meat prices here in Oz are only heading one way and it started way before inflation took off

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no-name-here t1_ir4k8bg wrote

Yes, or if the inflation-adjusted cost per calorie has gone down over time (such as due to increased yields) it could actually be closer to deflation than inflation? I suppose presenting it in terms of calorie output instead of constant dollar output would be better in that way. But also showing inflation-adjusted cost per calorie over time would be interesting as well.

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FiveFingerDisco t1_ir0ropu wrote

Why is the production not given in calories?

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monosodiumg64 t1_ir11bs1 wrote

The calorie would depend much more o!what's being farmed. Also not all ag output is for food, e.g. cotton and also corn and sugar for ethanol.

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TaftIsUnderrated t1_ir125xx wrote

Because cereal grains have lots of calories and are relatively easy to grow and harvest while fruits/vegetables/meats/dairy take way more effort per calorie to produce. Money is an easy way to measure the value of what is produced.

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Sininenn t1_ir17iwt wrote

It may be easy, but it is also misleading.

It does not take into account price changes in either direction, for example.

It also does not necessarily make it clear whether more food is actually produced, only that the profits from food production have been increasing.

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TaftIsUnderrated t1_ir18go8 wrote

That's total amount being produced, not profits.

Also if we had to pick a metric to base our agricultural system on, I would rather have a system that tries to maximize production based on money, not one that tries to maximize production based on calories - because then we would only be eating bread and rice.

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Sininenn t1_ir0v8qg wrote

Because this way it's easier to suggest our production of food is being more and more efficient, than it is in reality...

Profits above all...

−8

Potato_Octopi t1_ir1bp3t wrote

The chart doesn't show profit.

And yeah less land use and feeding a bigger population is more efficient.

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Sininenn t1_ir1qdm1 wrote

It also doesn't show whether we actually are being more efficient at feeding people.

It shows production value by its monetary value, which can only be determined by selling it for money, and therefore, often profit.

−3

Potato_Octopi t1_ir1sl8e wrote

You're feeding people with less land. You could drop the $ line, but it's nice to have some output benchmark.

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Sininenn t1_ir288vb wrote

But we don't know that, because this graph doesn't say anything about the amount of food produced per land area unit.

It only says that the overall monetary value of all food produced has increased, while the land use decreased.

Saying it's because we're farming food more efficiently is an assumption, that cannot be supported by this data.

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Potato_Octopi t1_ir2vhso wrote

Did humanity suffer a mass starvation over the past two decades and no one told me?

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Sininenn t1_ir337wc wrote

No one is saying that we're not getting better at producing food.

But this graph does not show food production efficiency, it shows agricultural products' overall monetary value...

As such, saying it is all attributed to efficiency increase in farming from this visualization is pure assumption. There are many more factors which contribute to monetrary value, other than productivity or efficiency.

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Potato_Octopi t1_ir3euqv wrote

It's as good as any other shorthand. Weight, volume and calories are all insufficient, as different crops output different values. $ value of an agricultural commodity index hasn't changed radically over the decades.

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Sininenn t1_ir3uftd wrote

It's not good enough.

And it sure as hell does not give a clear picture, as hiking prices would have the exact same effect than production efficiency.

And from this graph, you have no way of distinguishing which reason it actually is.

That's why it is a wrong metric to choose.

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Potato_Octopi t1_ir3v5ax wrote

What would you prefer? Corn or wheat yields as a proxy?

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Sininenn t1_ir402ub wrote

Overall yield, either average or median of all grown crops, in tonnes or calories, for example.

To show efficiency, possibly along with water usage needed and normalized per square kilometer.

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CustomerComplaintDep t1_ird6o50 wrote

The monetary value is a representation of how much value it brings consumers. That includes the value of calories, vitamins, minerals, flavor, general enjoyment, etc. Monetary value is a far richer metric than just calories.

0

Sininenn t1_irdfu3g wrote

No, the monetary value is a representation of how much value the consumers bring to vendors, shipping companies, food processing companies, and farmers.

It is richer in muddling factors too, such as profit increases across all levels of the supply chain, price changes due to crop losses, and all other possible market fluctuations which influence the price.

As such, it is a bad metric of value, quantity, quality or volume of food or agricultural production.

Or anything other than money, really...

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CustomerComplaintDep t1_irfkkiw wrote

Since producers and consumers agree on a price, we can deduce that the price is a value that is at least as much as the value to suppliers and no more than the value to consumers. So, while this does not capture consumer surplus, we can say that the value to consumers is at least this much.

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Sininenn t1_irfry94 wrote

Producers and consumers do NOT agree on a price.

Price is much, much more complex than a mere agreement, which implies negotiations, which there are absolutely none taking place during final customer purchase...

You can haggle the price when buying on a large scale, but try going into the supermarket and asking them to sell you food for less than the set price.

A price in and of itself brings zero value to customers...

Using monetary value to judge the production levels is misleading.

1

CustomerComplaintDep t1_irhektx wrote

Why would there need to be negotiation? Suppliers offer a price and consumers take it or leave it. Supply and demand causes the price to be set where both producers and consumers are satisfied. Of course the price does not, in itself, bring value. That's not at all what I'm saying. I'm saying that the value is implied by the price. No consumer would buy it unless they perceive that the value is greater than or equal to the price. So, the fact that they buy it tells us that the value is at least as high as the price.

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monosodiumg64 t1_ir11kzn wrote

Where do you get the idea that this is not an efficiency increase?

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Sininenn t1_ir16qyw wrote

Because if you only consider the monetary value of the food that is produced, raising prices alone can cause said monetary value to increase, without any increases to the amount of food that is produced.

In fact, heavily raising prices and decreasing production at the same time can also seem like an increase in the overall monetary value of food that is produced, if we use money as the sole metric of productivity.

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monosodiumg64 t1_ir2k5wk wrote

Bottom left corner says constant 2022 prices.

Older readers will know how much more of household income used to be spent on food. Food has become much cheaper in relation to incomes.

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Sininenn t1_ir3427a wrote

I never mentioned inflation, so cool, I guess?

I am sorry, I thought we were discussing data visualizations.

I am saying that this data visualization does not visualize production efficiency, only monetary value.

I don't care whether we are 500% more efficient at growing produce.

What I care about is information being presented honestly, and accurately, so that it is not misrepresented.

Monetary value increase is not automatically equivalent to overall volume increases, or productivity increase...

−1

Walter_ORielly t1_ir3ectl wrote

Fuck it - have an upvote for not using a fucking animation to depict simple information!

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OdinGuru t1_ir159by wrote

Not having both vertical scales include 0 seems very misleading here. Land use in particular land scale of 4.4 to 5 means that it’s largely constant with only ~10% deviation.

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Potato_Octopi t1_ir1b9z3 wrote

What's misleading about it? I don't think anyone would assume land use was zero a couple decades ago.

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OdinGuru t1_ir1dmv2 wrote

“Visually” (ie without paying attention to the scale numbers) the plot above make it “look” like land use and production both rose together in proportion from 1961 to 1999 then while production continued its rise that land use dropped.

However if we fixed the Y-axis to include zero. We’d visually see a very different “story”. Land usage would start high and say high with only some small “minor” variation across the plot and we’d still see production in $ trending up (as 1->5 is most of 0->5). In this plot it wouldn’t look like something massively different occurred before/after 1999. Instead it would be immediately apparent that the rise in $ over time probably has nothing to do with land use and is primarily driven by something else.

This is what some other comments here have pointed out, and that it may be “value” in $ increasing over time rather than actually producing more physical things per hectare.

4

Mendicant__ t1_ir3ewve wrote

The world has added 4 billion additional people over the time period of this chart, and in that same time the amount of hunger-affected people has gone down. There is no way that is possible unless we are actually producing more physical things on that land.

3

OdinGuru t1_ir3i9fu wrote

I don’t think anyone disagrees that yields have gone up due to increased efficiency. The point is that trying to measure that using $ value is flawed because yield increases can’t be separated from unit price changes. I do think it’s very unlikely that actual yields have increase by ~5x over 57 years, I doubt farming is THAT much better. From inflation alone we know that price for the same basket of goods has DEFINITELY gone up in that time. This data makes it impossible to know how much of one vs the other, you would need other data sets.

2

Mendicant__ t1_ir54lmf wrote

People here are definitely claiming exactly that--that yields aren't really higher, we're just charging more for food.

Leaving that aside, crop yields, by weight, have doubled or tripled for a bunch of food staples in the time frame of this chart, and this chart also shows land used for agriculture going up for most of the run.

2

Potato_Octopi t1_ir1jlh8 wrote

Visually the truncated Y axis allows the changes to be highlighted, which is the point of the chart. It doesn't change the "story" it just allows you to focus to focus on the changes.

And yields have been increasing per hectare, so that's a non complaint.

2

TheAtomicClock t1_ir1gd6w wrote

Yeah seriously. A visualization isn’t bad just because it requires rubbing a couple brain cells.

3

Josquius t1_ir1legw wrote

That's a nice positive graph. Though I do wonder on sustainability.

8

FinancialAd6213 t1_ir1f2m0 wrote

It's useless to compare space units with financial units

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Big_Forever5759 t1_ir25xzx wrote

The timeline also seems to match the use of roundup and gmo roundup ready seeds.

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Mobiuscate t1_ir1gom2 wrote

So since around 2000, we've been doing more with less? Sounds good.

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Mysterious_Cow_5342 t1_ir2ivxo wrote

Wrong. The graph is misleading and mainly shows how inflation is affecting the value of what’s being produced.

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Mendicant__ t1_ir3f4lh wrote

The dollar amounts are in constant dollars. It's already inflation adjusted. The world is producing more food per hectare of farmland.

1

Mysterious_Cow_5342 t1_ir3fleg wrote

Wrong again, the world is producing food that costs more now than in 1961. The currency is constant/adjusted for inflation but the price is higher now than in 1961.

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Snufflepuffster t1_ir1q3c6 wrote

As others have stated I’d prefer to see land use vs. biomass or land use vs. nutritional output (caloric value). You can’t eat money.

3

CaptainRAVE2 t1_ir1wj60 wrote

GM crops producing a higher yield?

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htamrah t1_ir4lukx wrote

The scale is very confusing. Agricultural land remained *almost* the same for the past 60 years while production is 500% higher.

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danboonn t1_ir1bnv2 wrote

Data is obviously manipulatable to push a particular narrative as well

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Drict t1_ir1uu4w wrote

Adjust for inflation, adjust for price changes (basically production per hector vs $ per hector)

This is so flawed.

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david1610 t1_ir25ll1 wrote

I think it is at least adjusted for inflation, note the constant prices bottom left. Definitely could be something else going on though, I would bet it is a mixture of efficiency and something else.

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stan-k t1_ir2hqgz wrote

Where are farm lands shrinking?

Since we're still burning down rainforest for farmland somewhere else must be losing farmland even faster.

1

anonkitty2 t1_ir3m1bx wrote

Kansas near the urban areas, because developers are willing to destroy farmland to allow for new developments (housing & commercial both).

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akraval t1_ir4ihep wrote

THAT's so sad it is that way, we should start revolution and we should victim Elon Musk and his wife, to make things right to the god af grain and sorrow.

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creazywars t1_ir4l4q5 wrote

Now let’s add fertilizer and water usage over time and the emissions generated by the industry

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astros1991 t1_ir5a31a wrote

Now put water usage and labour requirements in the graph too. That’d be something interesting to see.

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iiJokerzace t1_ir4kv7a wrote

Thanks to minecraft for teaching us how to build vertical farms <3

0

muhdbuht t1_ir1aowq wrote

Just wait until indoor hydroponics really takes off.

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QwertyKeyboard5 t1_ir1c9f2 wrote

Will hardly make a difference because majority is for animals and animals food (soy, corn).

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muhdbuht t1_ir1mp65 wrote

I'm curious as to what you mean? Agricultural food sources, regardless of destination, can still be grown hydroponically indoors. Benefits could include greater yield per acre and reduced need for pesticides.

Edit: I'm referring, of course, to the giant warehouse-style farms, not small single-family hobby ones.

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QwertyKeyboard5 t1_ir1tsj3 wrote

The amount of land used for animal food is that great that you can't ever put it all indoors. Literally half the land of the planet is used for that and the animals itself.

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muhdbuht t1_ir2fxyy wrote

Wouldn't it stand to reason that a building that takes up 1/4 of the space and grows crops four layers high would still produce the same amount?

Not to mention, I've seen concept art of repurposed missile silos being converted into hydroponic farms.

2