What's Eating America
Corn is one of the plant kingdom's biggest successes. That's not necessarily good for the United States.
- By Michael Pollan
- Smithsonian magazine, July 2006, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 3)
All life depends on nitrogen; it is the building block from which nature assembles amino acids, proteins and nucleic acid; the genetic information that orders and perpetuates life is written in nitrogen ink. But the supply of usable nitrogen on earth is limited. Although earth's atmosphere is about 80 percent nitrogen, all those atoms are tightly paired, nonreactive and therefore useless; the 19th-century chemist Justus von Liebig spoke of atmospheric nitrogen's "indifference to all other substances." To be of any value to plants and animals, these self-involved nitrogen atoms must be split and then joined to atoms of hydrogen.
Chemists call this process of taking atoms from the atmosphere and combining them into molecules useful to living things "fixing" that element. Until a German Jewish chemist named Fritz Haber figured out how to turn this trick in 1909, all the usable nitrogen on earth had at one time been fixed by soil bacteria living on the roots of leguminous plants (such as peas or alfalfa or locust trees) or, less commonly, by the shock of electrical lightning, which can break nitrogen bonds in the air, releasing a light rain of fertility.
In his book Enriching the Earth: Fritz Haber, Carl Bosch and the Transformation of World Food Production, Vaclav Smil pointed out that "there is no way to grow crops and human bodies without nitrogen." Before Haber's invention, the sheer amount of life earth could support—the size of crops and therefore the number of human bodies—was limited by the amount of nitrogen that bacteria and lightning could fix. By 1900, European scientists had recognized that unless a way was found to augment this naturally occurring nitrogen, the growth of the human population would soon grind to a very painful halt. The same recognition by Chinese scientists a few decades later is probably what compelled China's opening to the West: after Nixon's 1972 trip, the first major order the Chinese government placed was for 13 massive fertilizer factories. Without them, China would have starved.
This is why it may not be hyperbole to claim, as Smil does, that the Haber-Bosch process for fixing nitrogen (Bosch gets the credit for commercializing Haber's idea) is the most important invention of the 20th century. He estimates that two of every five humans on earth today would not be alive if not for Fritz Haber's invention. We can easily imagine a world without computers or electricity, Smil points out, but without synthetic fertilizer billions of people would never have been born. Though, as these numbers suggest, humans may have struck a Faustian bargain with nature when Fritz Haber gave us the power to fix nitrogen.
Fritz Haber? No, I'd never heard of him either, even though he was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1918 for "improving the standards of agriculture and the well-being of mankind." But the reason for his obscurity has less to do with the importance of his work than an ugly twist of his biography, which recalls the dubious links between modern warfare and industrial agriculture: during World War I, Haber threw himself into the German war effort, and his chemistry kept alive Germany's hopes for victory, by allowing it to make bombs from synthetic nitrate. Later, Haber put his genius for chemistry to work developing poison gases—ammonia, then chlorine. (He subsequently developed Zyklon B, the gas used in Hitler's concentration camps.) His wife, a chemist sickened by her husband's contribution to the war effort, used his army pistol to kill herself; Haber died, broken and in flight from Nazi Germany, in a Basel hotel room in 1934.
His story has been all but written out of the 20th century. But it embodies the paradoxes of science, the double edge to our manipulations of nature, the good and evil that can flow not only from the same man but from the same knowledge. Even Haber's agricultural benefaction has proved to be a decidedly mixed blessing.
When humankind acquired the power to fix nitrogen, the basis of soil fertility shifted from a total reliance on the energy of the sun to a new reliance on fossil fuel. That's because the Haber-Bosch process works by combining nitrogen and hydrogen gases under immense heat and pressure in the presence of a catalyst. The heat and pressure are supplied by prodigious amounts of electricity, and the hydrogen is supplied by oil, coal or, most commonly today, natural gas. True, these fossil fuels were created by the sun, billions of years ago, but they are not renewable in the same way that the fertility created by a legume nourished by sunlight is. (That nitrogen is fixed by a bacterium living on the roots of the legume, which trades a tiny drip of sugar for the nitrogen the plant needs.)
Liberated from the old biological constraints, the farm could now be managed on industrial principles, as a factory transforming inputs of raw material—chemical fertilizer—into outputs of corn. And corn adapted brilliantly to the new industrial regime, consuming prodigious quantities of fossil fuel energy and turning out ever more prodigious quantities of food energy. Growing corn, which from a biological perspective had always been a process of capturing sunlight to turn it into food, has in no small measure become a process of converting fossil fuels into food. More than half of all the synthetic nitrogen made today is applied to corn.
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Comments (10)
This article, which I originally found buried in the back pages of my Smithsonian Magazine, should have been the front page story. The effects of nitrogen on our food supply, population size and overall health is hard to even quantify.
Left unmentioned in the article is the connection between synthetic nitrogen and killer food allergies.
Glaring to me was the fact that peanuts are a LEGUME and are also one of the (now) most dangerous food allergies on the planet. (Has this connection ever been investigated? I think it should be!)
When I was a kid in the 70's, peanut allergies were just starting to show up in the population. Hmmmm...coincidence? I don't think so.
Thanks for the AWESOME article. It changed me forever.
Posted by Mimi Osterdahl on October 26,2009 | 11:41 AM
I am very concerned that humans still don't get the whole picture.
It is well that we see this from a non industrial perspective,BUT we must still look to the human growth pattern and no longer keep our heads in the sand.
We have to study the size of populations and the inherent relationship of the size to the balance of nature and begin to figure out a responsible end to Population Growth!!!
I would love to see this country balance its population size at about 400,000,000. and we could then really see the effects of sustainability take hold and the quality of life begin to increase for everyone. The old business model that profit is in population and industrial growth just doesn't hold.
QUALITY OF HUMAN LIFE OR QUANTITY OF HUMAN LIFE????
Which will it be?
Posted by John Pupparo on May 27,2009 | 04:02 PM
Great article. I just have one question: how does acidified rain contribute to global warming? I really don't understand the physics behind that cognitive leap and would love someone to explain it to me.
Posted by sharon islip on May 23,2009 | 12:12 AM
This article is required reading in all of our Environmental Science classes- It is absolutely well done, and we have shared it with over 1000 of our students and all of our colleagues, who use it as well.
Posted by Nick Henshue on April 11,2009 | 08:54 PM
If this article is of interest - I highly recommend reading more in-depth in his book "The Omnivore's Dilemma".
Posted by K. Mayberry on July 2,2008 | 12:49 PM
I re-read this fantastic article every few months, and have told many people about it. I am eager to read more by Mr. Pollan.
Posted by Don Pecano on June 11,2008 | 02:00 PM
Without a doubt, the single most eye opening article I've read in years!! My mind has been opened to many cause-affect phenomenon in scores of diverse focus areas from food to population to warfare and...of course...on this Earth Day 2008...the environment! Hats off to Michael Pollan and Smithsonian! One thing for sure, I'll think twice about ethanol as a "green" solution since it takes a half-gallon of oil to produce the nitrogen required to fertilize the bushell of corn that makes...how much ethanol? ;D
Posted by Phillip Genest on April 22,2008 | 12:57 AM
The Haber Bosch process is most profitable to chemical enterprises that produce explosives. Fall out however reduces bio-mass resistance to disease and pestilance. Pine Beetles for one, humans for another. People wonder why the trees are turning yellow,accompanied by acrid fumes of cordite. Water tables are more than 3 feet or more below normal stages as there is not enough nitrogen in the atmosphere to naturally produce rain. God ole Thunder storms are becoming a thing of the past. A century of fixation all stored into neat little bombs, that make great big messes.
Posted by Dennis E. Smith on February 27,2008 | 09:08 PM
I agree with the previous comment. I use this article in many of my classes to bring the nitrogen cycle home to students and make it more relevant to their lives. Great article.
Posted by Dr, Linda Ingling Rogness on January 22,2008 | 04:27 PM
I consider this story about CORN, to be one of the most important stories that I've ever read. It should be required reading in our education system.
Posted by Matthew Conn on December 22,2007 | 10:42 AM