European agricultural policy has entered a period of structural instability marked bywidespread farmer protests, soil degradation, and accelerated consolidation of industrialagribusiness. This paper argues that the crisis is not political but homeostatic: a failure togovern living ecological systems using principles appropriate to their cyclical, regenerativenature. Current regulatory frameworks treat agriculture as a linear industrial process—inputs,outputs, emissions—rather than as a closed-loop biological system. This mismatch producesBiological Debt: deferred ecological harm masked by short-term compliance metrics. TheG.R.A.Z.E. Protocol (Generative Regenerative Agricultural Zone Ecology) offers a correctiveframework grounded in soil sovereignty, methane cycling, carbon capture, and the culturalecology of traditional farming. It reframes ruminant-based agriculture not as a pollutantsource, but as a homeostatic regulator essential to ecological stability, food security, and ruralcontinuity.Keywords: regenerative agriculture, soil carbon sequestration, biogenic methane, ecologicalhomeostasis, food sovereignty, EU agricultural policy, carbon capture, sustainable farming
Smith et al. (Sun,) studied this question.