OPEC Fund Quarterly - 2023 Q2

SPECIAL FEATURE

Nurturing resilience through simplicity The Fukuoka Agriculture Method, developed by Masanobu Fukuoka, a Japanese farmer and philosopher celebrated for his natural farming and revegetation of deserted lands, is rooted in the idea of working in harmony with nature. This approach emphasizes four key principles: no-till farming, natural fertilization, minimal weeding and permanent ground cover. By avoiding soil disturbance through plowing or tilling, preserving soil structure, and nurturing a diverse ecosystem, the Fukuoka Method helps farms become more resilient

and promoting the spontaneous growth of diverse vegetation. A project

supported by the United Nations Development Programme trained and supported local farmers in Timor Leste to apply the Fukuoka approach. The project was aimed at cultivating open forest land to protect community buildings from natural disasters, as well as adopt the system for farming agricultural crops to promote sustainable land management and enhance crop yield. The Üç Elma Farm (Three Apples) in Turkey’s central Anatolian

If you let nature do its work, it will give you what you need.

Hüseyin Genç, founder of the Üç Elma Farm

to climate change impacts. The model is recognized for its ability to reduce soil erosion, enhance water retention, promote biodiversity, and sequester carbon. Masanoubu Fukuoka was born in 1913 in Japan. Trained as a microbiologist and agricultural scientist, he began his career as a research scientist specializing in plant pathology. Fukuoka called his agricultural philosophy “shizen nōhō” translated as “natural farming” or referred to as “do-nothing farming”. He spent many years travelling around the world giving lectures, working directly to plant seeds and revegetate areas. Fukuoka reinvented the concept of seed balls by developing his own version called “seed bombs.” These are small spheres made by encapsulating seeds within a mixture of clay, compost and sometimes other additives like nutrients, beneficial microorganisms or a mix of seeds from various crops, flowers, and herbs. These seed balls are designed to protect the seeds and provide them with favorable conditions for germination and establishment. Fukuoka would scatter these seed bombs in the fields, allowing them to naturally break down with rain or soil moisture, releasing the seeds

province Çankırı uses the Fukuoka Method which improved crop yields, reduced erosion, increased biodiversity and enhanced sustainability. Hüseyin Genç, the founder of Üç Elma, says Fukuoka practices foster healthier ecosystems and resilient farming. “We want to show that a different way of agriculture is possible. This is exactly how we used to do farming in Anatolia until 1950, when industrial production based on pesticide application to enhance yields arrived. For generations, my family has been farming with these methods.” Genç, who lives on the farm with his wife and daughter, examines what “increased yield” means. He says: “When you are producing 600 kilograms of something full of poison with genetically modified seeds, I can assure you that those seeds will enter the soil with their illness. The Fukuoka Method says if you let nature do its work, it will give you what you need. For example if you put pesticides on an apple tree, more apples will stay on the tree. But the tree is not designed to nurture all these apples, so the apples get less of what they need and they are now different and less nutritious. This is our principle at Üç Elma Farm. We let nature take control.”

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