blackshoe, on 2013-May-27, 07:39, said:
I don't know about anyone else here, but I haven't burnt any fields in Africa lately, and I'm not in a position to tell those who are doing so to stop.
The last line of onoway's quote is pure fear mongering.
How much money would it take to guarantee the money normally gained from a field perhaps with a bonus of 5% or so, IF the farmers try a different manner of cultivating? How many farmers do you suppose would say no? These are mostly very poor farmers living subsistence lives and doing things that way simply because that's the way it's been done for generations. Governments in the "developed" countries have frequently paid farmers NOT to grow crops in order to keep the prices high, but that's not the idea at all. China did this when restoring the Loess Plateau. (Not sure that it was an optional choice there though.)
The point is that with such a guarantee it might well not cost very much because the crops would almost inevitably not only come in but do BETTER than usual. So it would mainly be the cost of people to train and monitor and help with techniques.
Farmers are already changing but it's slow because Africa is so big. It would of course help if we didn't burn as well, but we don't do it on anything like the same level, and our farmers/foresters also need to learn how this is a very short term gain for long term loss for them as well as for carbon emission.
Are you saying that the last line in the quote is incorrect? What part of it? It isn't saying that anything is causing anything else, simply that two conditions were simultaneous at that time. Perhaps it does imply one may be associated with the other, but if that may be so, then it would surely be silly and irresponsible not to say unscientific not to include this as a possible side effect of returning to one environmental condition which according to people who supposedly know,was unique to that time (until now) in the history of the earth?