Tuesday 11 September 2012

Agriculture and Industry: Economic foundations



Agriculture, the conversion of sunlight to chemical energy and fibres for human use, and Industry, the manipulation of matter to create artefacts, form the foundation of any economy while also being dependent on one another. Agriculture, even in its most primitive form, cannot function without tools (try digging soil with your bare hands), which are products of industry. However, industry, especially handcraft industry, requires the energy provided by agriculture to both create artefacts and extract the raw materials necessary. Neither of these elements stands apart but rather meshes in an intertwining whole. This follows naturally from humanities evolution from only being tool-wielding hunter-gatherers to farmers who used tools with both agriculture and industry being formed together at the same time.

What are the practical aspects of this analysis? It basically allows us to start technological triage on the basic elements of our tech base in a system based holistic approach. We can define completely internal economic units  e.g. an organic agriculture with horses, charcoal from a logging industry (half agriculture, half industry) and a blacksmith with bog iron is a self-sufficient unit that can be expanded/changed in various ways and join other units. Expanding the smithy to a machine shop, using bicycles, adding recycling technology, electricity and/or basic renewables (other than charcoal and food) are some of the ways the alter this basic unit.

Lets imagine this system, how it functions and how changes and linkages could occur. We’ll use a small village surrounded by farmland and forests, no major settlements are nearby (towns and cities) only other villages connected by roads. For the baseline village the only power sources are food (human), fodder (animal) and wood (charcoal, heating or cooking). Local resources are what can be grown and accessed from iron deposits (bog iron or minable) that a small village could utilise. The baseline tech/skill structure to provide the economy is founded on farming, logging and blacksmithing, each feeds the other in some vital way to produce all of the resources the others need to function. The farmers and loggers require tools from the blacksmith, the blacksmith needs charcoal made from wood and the loggers and blacksmith need food from the farmers (yes, they would grow/hunt their own in this situation but only a supplementary amount). Horses and oxen provide transport both within the village, from the farms and to other villages. This basic structure could last indefinitely (if the iron is recycled) without outside imports, unless some disaster hits. However, it doesn’t fulfil all the needs of the villagers; cloth needs to be spun to make clothes, shelters needs to be erected and medicine created for times of sickness.  So these other tech units (fibre production, then spinning thread, making clothes and the tools necessary for the cloth industry) need to be added. In a peasant village these jobs wouldn’t be done by specialists, the wives would have spun cloth and made clothes, but as specialisation occurs new professions would have sprung up but the basic tech/skill structures are still there.

Now let’s change the basics. Instead of only having access to wood, food and fodder, these peasants use either windmills or waterwheels to provide motive power. For this you need a more advanced smithy and  also carpentry. Therefore, to add the complexity of waterwheels or windmills we have to expand the skills of an already existing component. The same occurs if bicycles are added, along with new materials. What happens if we upgrade the single blacksmith to a small machine shop and foundry? Suddenly the range of tools and machines that can be made (and the quantity) has expanded and if we add electricity more things become possible still (like radio). To accommodate this would require more specialisation in the machinists and more resources, e.g. if the machines run of an electric motor or a heat engine then the energy would have to be provide via either the windmills,  waterwheels, biofuels or wood. Every change affects all the relating techs and alters, even if only slightly, the dynamics of the system.   

Ultimately, which basic forms of agriculture and industry are implemented in a given area will depend on both the local environment of resources, weather/climate plus wildlife and the community of technology in adjacent areas. From these two elements will a human-technology ecosystem form.

2 comments:

  1. Hi Leo,

    Nah I don't think our future in the short term will be like the Cubans. For your interest, I grow my own food because I'm troubled by the quality of the food available at supermarkets and the dismantling of our local food manufacturing/processing capacity courtesy of the duopoly of the two big retailers - which is another issue altogether.

    Hey, thought you might be interested in this and it also relates to your recent post:

    http://www.environment.gov.au/heritage/places/national/mount-william/information.html

    This site is not far from Lancefield which is about 70km north of Melbourne. All of the sites are fenced off, but it is very interesting in how far the trade in these quarried goods travelled in times gone by.

    Yup, I too reckon villages are the ultimate form of sustainability in an agricultural setting.

    "As a permaculturist, what are your views on integrating biofuels/bioplastics into the farming system and local economy?"

    Well, I don't know anything about the production of bioplastics. But, alcohol is a reasonably easy biofuel to make and has been made for thousands of years. Generally it is seen as another preserving technique. I'm moving towards making it (when I have more free time) and consider it to be one of the best tradeable commodities around.

    Food is really just another store of low grade fuel. Interesting stuff.

    Regards

    Chris

    PS: Make sure you drop a link to your posts on other websites.

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  2. When I was travelling from darwin to adelaide (saw Uluru right after it rained) I heard about things like that, goods that travelled half the continent (one was some kind of ochre). Walking can move things quite far if given the time.

    In the short term the destruction of our farming capacity will most likely be the greatest threat, good thing a counterbalancing act is starting to happen (ranging from Dick Smiths food store with only australian food to the permaculture movement).

    By the looks of it Bioplastics aren't something an individual farmer could do, unlike biofuels. Maybe a big farm (more like a complex at this point) could. A use for ethanol other than drinking
    http://www.ozflame.com.au/
    http://bioenergyvictoria.net.au/home might have some things your interested in.

    I'm working on two models for biofuel production, not sure which is better (guess it depends); the first is where the farm produces the biofuel and sells any extra (limited to low tech production, which is possible for all) and the other were the (this is what i imagine for bioplastics) farmers sell the feedstock to a local/regional producer who turns the feedstock into fuel.

    If you want the biofuel to power an engine (like a diesel engine for pumping or a tractor/truck) then biodiesel sound like the best, if you grow the oil needed. Biogas sounds like a better option for stationary or electricty generation. Depends hugely on what you grow and your own situation (ethanol is the easiest).

    it's just my background for growing is almost all second hand (i have farmer relatives and my mom gardens a lot, couple of other things that mention the theory, like why crop rotation is done. i mostly look after the chickens and sometimes move soil around) so its hard to actually judge if its a good move or not.

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