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Responsible science -- in the public interest
by Dr. James L. Oblinger
Dean, College of Agriculture and Life Sciences
North Carolina State University
North Carolina is fortunate to enjoy a quality of life that makes it one
of the fastest growing states in the nation. With that growth has come
change -- and challenge. As farm land is converted to other uses, farmers
in North Carolina, as in other states, must produce food for more people
on less land. Meanwhile, runoff from factories, cities and farms
threatens the quality of our groundwater, our rivers, our lakes, our
estuaries.
To confront such challenges effectively, North Carolina State University
and its College of Agriculture and Life Sciences have provided sound
leadership, education and science, on the university campus in Raleigh as
well as on research farms, in industrial settings and in Cooperative
Extension centers in all 100 counties and on the Cherokee Reservation.
We are committed to finding solutions to the problems faced by North
Carolinians, both rural and urban, and to discovering and sharing
knowledge and new technology that is relevant and responsive to the needs
of our citizens. We conduct science for the sake of people, not just for
the sake of science -- in the best interest of all. Because of this
service, we feel we have earned the publics trust. We do not take that
trust lightly.
We are also committed to objectivity. Because objectivity is the
cornerstone of science, our scientists are diligent about having their
findings reviewed by fellow experts to ensure that they are sound and
unbiased. This peer-review process is particularly important in a public
institution like the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences. While we
are extraordinarily careful to maintain our objectivity, the very nature
of scientific inquiry sometimes produces results that, without deep
analysis, may appear contradictory.
This has sometimes been the case during the heated debate over the best
methods to deal with swine waste. For example, on the one hand, our
research has shown that some fraction of older lagoons that farmers use
to treat swine waste can sometimes pose an environmental threat to
groundwater. And yet our research also has shown that when properly
managed, the lagoon/spray field method of treating waste can be
environmentally and economically sound.
Economics is an extraordinarily important part of the equation if we are
to fulfill our mandate of conducting science in the public interest. If
we do not consider the cost to the farmer of proposed waste management
techniques, we are not doing our job. Yet we must also consider the
effect of the waste management methods on the environment, because the
environmental and economic aspects of agriculture have always been
inextricably intertwined. Farmers were the original stewards of the land,
and as they adopt new agricultural practices they need to ensure the
environmental quality upon which they depend. Likewise, consumers need a
clean environment, and they also rely on our countrys abundant, safe,
inexpensive food supply and benefit from the dollars that agriculture
brings into the states economy. Agribusiness is, after all, North
Carolinas number one industry. Food, fiber and forestry account for more
than one-fifth of the states income and employees.
A mutual understanding of common concerns -- and common challenges -- is
critical when it comes to the swine industry, which is now our states
leading agricultural endeavor. The effort within N.C. States College of
Agriculture and Life Sciences to address these concerns is unparalleled
by any other institution. We are a national leader in waste management
research. Through our Animal and Poultry Waste Management Center,
scientists from various disciplines are developing and evaluating waste
treatment technologies that will protect air, soil and water quality and
support our states important animal agriculture industry. Were also
working with researchers from other universities, the U.S. Department of
Agricultures Agricultural Research Service and the N.C. Department of
Agriculture and Consumer Services to develop more effective methods of
dealing with the wastes generated by animal agriculture.
We remain committed to finding viable solutions and recognize that
objective scientific inquiry often produces the best available solution.
In the case of the problems facing the swine industry, our scientists are
making excellent progress to develop the waste management technologies
that are both inexpensive and entirely benign to the environment.
Like other research in key areas of public concern, our swine waste
research will give policy makers -- indeed, all citizens -- the
information they need to make difficult decisions that will
simultaneously support the economic needs of farmers and address the
necessity of protecting our environment for the greatest benefit of all
North Carolinians.
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