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Bacteria vs. Pesticides: How the Microbiome Defeats Chemistry with Reasonable Reason

⚠️ Problem: the earth is suffocating

Every year, a Ukrainian farmer loses more than just the harvest. He loses living soil. Excessive use of pesticides and herbicides kills not only pests, but also microorganisms that provide fertility. A “dead zone” is formed in the soil — the cycle of nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium is disrupted. The land becomes a mechanical substrate, not an ecosystem.

But science brings hope — friendly bacteria are returning to the battlefield.


🧪 Solution: Microbiome management instead of chemical treatment

Modern agricultural technologies allow you to create and “reprogram” the soil microbiome to:

  • suppress pests and fungi naturally
  • restore nutrient balance
  • stimulate plant growth without additional pesticides

🌍 World cases

🇺🇸 USA – Indigo Ag

The company has developed bacterial inoculants that adapt plants to drought and reduce dependence on agrochemicals. After applying these bioagents to wheat fields, pesticide use has decreased by 30–40%.

🇳🇱 Netherlands – BioMyGreen

In the Living Soil project, farmers use bacterial cultures from local soils that suppress fusarium wilt and powdery mildew. By 2023, about 40% of greenhouse farms had switched to this model.

🇮🇳 India – Sahaja Farms

In response to soil degradation, farmers began growing native bacterial strains on site (through “Jeevamrut”) — the effectiveness of soil pest control increased by 60%, without the use of chemicals.


🇺🇦 Ukraine: first steps that could be a breakthrough

  • Scientists at the Institute of Microbiology and Virology of the NAS of Ukraine are researching strains of Bacillus subtilis and Azotobacter, which are able to reduce the need for fungicides and increase plant resistance to stress.
  • LLC “BTU-Center” (Cherkash region) already produces biological products based on beneficial bacteria, which are used in more than 20 regions.

🔍 In 2024, the “Zelena Dolyna” farm in Khmelnytskyi region replaced pesticides with biological products — costs decreased by 18%, and corn yield increased by 12%.


🌱 Benefits for Ukrainian agricultural producers:

What does biomicrobiology provide?Instead of whatResult
Synthesis of natural antibioticsChemical fungicidesFewer toxins
Nitrogen fixationNitrate fertilizersCheaper and more environmentally friendly
Formation of a “barrier” at the rootInsecticidesProtection without harm
Restoring soil structureDeep plowing + chemistryReducing erosion

⚡️ What prevents its spread in Ukraine?

  • Distrust of biological products: farmers fear reduced yields
  • Underdeveloped infrastructure: local bacteria production is in its infancy
  • Outdated government programs: chemical subsidies still dominate

🧭 What’s next?

  1. Training farmers and agronomists: how the microbiome works, how to “feed” it
  2. Developing local laboratories: producing effective bioagents from local soil
  3. Pilot projects with state funding: supporting those who refuse chemicals

💡 Conclusion

The future lies not in pesticides, but in partnerships with invisible helpers: microorganisms. Ukraine has all the resources to become a leader in soil bioengineering if it bets not on poison, but on life.

A living land is a living nation.

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