December 16, 2007
Confucius advised that
if we hoped to repair what was wrong in the world, we had best start with the
“rectification of the names.” The corruption of society begins with
the failure to call things by their proper names, he maintained, and its
renovation begins with the reattachment of words to real things and precise
concepts. So what about this much-abused pair of names, sustainable and
unsustainable?
To call a practice or
system unsustainable is not just to lodge an objection based on aesthetics,
say, or fairness or some ideal of environmental rectitude. What it means is
that the practice or process can’t go on indefinitely because it is
destroying the very conditions on which it depends. It means that, as the
Marxists used to say, there are internal contradictions that sooner or later
will lead to a breakdown.
For years now, critics
have been speaking of modern industrial agriculture as
“unsustainable” in precisely these terms, though what form the
“breakdown” might take or when it might happen has never been
certain. Would the aquifers run dry? The pesticides
stop working? The soil lose its fertility? All these breakdowns have been
predicted and they may yet come to pass. But if a system is unsustainable
— if its workings offend the rules of nature — the cracks and signs
of breakdown may show up in the most unexpected times and places. Two stories
in the news this year, stories that on their faces would seem to have nothing
to do with each other let alone with agriculture, may point to an imminent
breakdown in the way we’re growing food today.
The first story is
about MRSA, the very scary antibiotic-resistant
strain of Staphylococcus bacteria that is now killing more Americans each year
than AIDS
— 100,000 infections leading to 19,000 deaths in 2005, according to
estimates in The Journal of the American Medical
Association. For years now, drug-resistant staph infections have been a
problem in hospitals, where the
heavy use of antibiotics can create resistant strains of
bacteria. It’s Evolution 101: the drugs kill off all but the tiny handful
of microbes that, by dint of a chance mutation, possess genes allowing them to
withstand the onslaught; these hardy survivors then get to work building a
drug-resistant superrace. The methicillin-resistant staph that first emerged in
hospitals as early as the 1960s posed a threat mostly to elderly patients. But
a new and even more virulent strain — called “community-acquired
MRSA” — is now killing young and otherwise healthy people who have
not set foot in a hospital. No one is yet sure how or where this strain
evolved, but it is sufficiently different from the hospital-bred strains to
have some researchers looking elsewhere for its origin, to another environment
where the heavy use of antibiotics is selecting for the evolution of a lethal
new microbe: the concentrated animal feeding operation, or CAFO.
The Union of Concerned
Scientists estimates that at least 70 percent of the antibiotics used in
Public-health experts
have been warning us for years that this situation is a public-health disaster
waiting to happen. Sooner or later, the profligate use of these antibiotics
— in many cases the very same ones we depend on when we’re sick
— would lead to the evolution of bacteria that could shake them off like
a spring shower. It appears that “sooner or later” may be now.
Recent studies in Europe and
Scientists have not
established that any of the strains of MRSA presently killing Americans
originated on factory farms. But given the rising public alarm about MRSA and
the widespread use on these farms of precisely the class of antibiotics to
which these microbes have acquired resistance, you would think our
public-health authorities would be all over it. Apparently not. When, in
August, the Keep Antibiotics Working coalition asked the Food and
Drug Administration what the agency was doing about the problem of MRSA in
livestock, the agency had little to say. Earlier this month, though, the F.D.A.
indicated that it may begin a pilot screening program with the C.D.C.
As for independent
public-health researchers, they say they can’t study the problem without
the cooperation of the livestock industry, which, not surprisingly, has not
been forthcoming. For what if these researchers should find proof that one of
the hidden costs of cheap meat is an epidemic of drug-resistant infection among
young people? There would be calls to revolutionize the way we produce meat in
this country. This is not something that the meat and the pharmaceutical
industries or their respective regulatory “watchdogs” — the
Department of Agriculture and F.D.A. — are in any rush to see happen.
he second story is
about honeybees, which have endured their own mysterious epidemic this past
year. Colony Collapse Disorder was first identified in 2006, when a Pennsylvanian
beekeeper noticed that his bees were disappearing — going out on foraging
expeditions in the morning never to return. Within months, beekeepers in 24
states were reporting losses of between 20 percent and 80 percent of their
bees, in some cases virtually overnight. Entomologists have yet to identify the
culprit, but suspects include a virus, agricultural pesticides and a parasitic
mite. (Media reports that genetically modified crops or cellphone towers might
be responsible have been discounted.) But whatever turns out to be the
immediate cause of colony collapse, many entomologists believe some such
disaster was waiting to happen: the lifestyle of the modern honeybee leaves the
insects so stressed out and their immune systems so compromised that, much like
livestock on factory farms, they’ve become vulnerable to whatever new
infectious agent happens to come along.
You need look no
farther than a
They come on the backs
of tractor-trailers from as far away as
In 2005 the demand for
honeybees in
“We’re
placing so many demands on bees we’re forgetting that they’re a
living organism and that they have a seasonal life cycle,” Marla Spivak,
a honeybee entomologist at the University of Minnesota,
told The Chronicle. “We’re wanting them to function as a machine. .
. . We’re expecting them to get off the truck and be fine.”
We’re asking a
lot of our bees. We’re asking a lot of our pigs too. That seems to be a
hallmark of industrial agriculture: to maximize production and keep food as
cheap as possible, it pushes natural systems and organisms to their limit,
asking them to function as efficiently as machines. When the inevitable
problems crop up — when bees or pigs remind us they are not machines
— the system can be ingenious in finding “solutions,” whether
in the form of antibiotics to keep pigs healthy or foreign bees to help
pollinate the almonds. But this year’s solutions have a way of becoming
next year’s problems. That is to say, they aren’t
“sustainable.”
From this perspective,
the story of Colony Collapse Disorder and the story of drug-resistant staph are
the same story. Both are parables about the precariousness of monocultures.
Whenever we try to rearrange natural systems along the lines of a machine or a
factory, whether by raising too many pigs in one place or too many almond
trees, whatever we may gain in industrial efficiency, we sacrifice in
biological resilience. The question is not whether systems this brittle will
break down, but when and how, and whether when they do, we’ll be prepared
to treat the whole idea of sustainability as something more than a nice word.
Michael
Pollan is a contributing writer. His new book, “In Defense of Food: An
Eater’s Manifesto,” will be published next month.