I’m thinking about the same bell curve with regard to social and political movements. Many of the issues I care about are moving along this towards greater adoption—with great strides over the past couple years. But simple accommodation for growth may mean the loss of those very essential qualities.
Are there qualities in the regenerative model that can prevent it from being co-opted by AgriGovCorp, or simply drifting from its core promise?
Good line of thinking. There have been a number of big corps over the last couple of years trying to enter and "scale up" regenerative ag. They basically use it for marketing and pay the grower just a little above commodity. I think they will eventually fail through.
By its very nature, regenerative agriculture is decentralized. It works for the folks who take ownership and responsibility. I think it will continue to grow as the decentralization continues. The corps will eventually move on to plant based meat or something that looks more lucrative.
Good stuff.
I’m thinking about the same bell curve with regard to social and political movements. Many of the issues I care about are moving along this towards greater adoption—with great strides over the past couple years. But simple accommodation for growth may mean the loss of those very essential qualities.
Are there qualities in the regenerative model that can prevent it from being co-opted by AgriGovCorp, or simply drifting from its core promise?
Good line of thinking. There have been a number of big corps over the last couple of years trying to enter and "scale up" regenerative ag. They basically use it for marketing and pay the grower just a little above commodity. I think they will eventually fail through.
By its very nature, regenerative agriculture is decentralized. It works for the folks who take ownership and responsibility. I think it will continue to grow as the decentralization continues. The corps will eventually move on to plant based meat or something that looks more lucrative.
HODL that soil <3