Smallholder farmer support platforms (making sustainable land use economically viable)
Food and farming are destroying the land they depend on
Our food system is caught in a destructive cycle. Modern agriculture feeds billions of people, but it's systematically destroying the very resources it depends on — soil, water, forests, and climate stability.
Livestock farming alone uses nearly 80% of agricultural land while producing just 18% of our calories. Industrial crop production relies heavily on fossil fuel-derived fertilizers that pollute waterways and strip soil of its natural fertility. Meanwhile, we're clearing forests at an alarming rate to create more farmland, even as we waste a third of all food produced.
This isn't sustainable. We need technologies that can maintain food security while regenerating the land, reducing emissions, and working within planetary boundaries.
Clearing land to grow food is one of the biggest drivers of deforestation
Agriculture drives about 80% of global deforestation. Every year, an area the size of Greece is cleared for farming — mostly for cattle pasture and crops like soy, palm oil, and cocoa. This destroys biodiversity hotspots and releases massive amounts of stored carbon.
The problem is often hidden in global supply chains. Beef from recently cleared Amazon rainforest, soy from converted Brazilian savanna, and palm oil from cleared Indonesian forests end up in products sold worldwide. We need technologies that can track and prevent this destruction while supporting farmers' livelihoods.
Smallholder farmer support platforms (making sustainable land use economically viable)
Digital platforms that provide smallholder farmers with training, financing, and market access to adopt sustainable practices. These often include payments for forest conservation or carbon sequestration to make forest protection economically competitive with clearing.
Services include mobile-based agricultural extension, access to sustainable certification programs, connections to premium markets, and payments for ecosystem services. The goal is making it more profitable for farmers to protect forests than to clear them.
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