Foreword
ix
acceptable and regenerative practices using . . . [the] Four Principles of Organic Agriculture. Tese principles are: 1.
Health.
Organic agriculture should sustain and enhance the health of soil, plant, animal, human, and the planet as one and indivisible. 2.
Ecology.
Organic agriculture should be based on living ecological systems and cycles, work with them, emulate them, and help sustain them. 3.
Fairness.
Organic agriculture should build on relation-ships that ensure fairness in the familiar environment and life opportunities. 4.
Care.
Organic agriculture should be managed in a pre-cautionary and responsible manner to protect the health and well-being of current and future generations and the environment.” Tis book,
Te Regenerative Agriculture Solution
, distills the knowledge gained over decades of collective work—and shows the many interconnections of living systems. As André puts it, “Plants, through photosynthesis, use solar energy to turn carbon dioxide and water into glucose. Glucose is the basis of the food system for most of life. It is a primary energy source of the cells of most living organisms, including plants and animals. It is the basis of the fuels that power the mitochondria—the engines inside the cells of nearly every organism on Earth, including us.” Tis perspective helps us see through false solutions to climate change, such as carbon offsets, geoengineering, bio-fuels, and renewable energy based on the mining of lithium and cobalt. It also clarifies the real solutions that find their foundational principles in the biosphere, in living soil, and in justice and fairness among people and all living organisms.