Theemile wrote:Even if Grayson isn't starving, it is dangerously reliant on a fragile, artificial, overly expensive agricultural system and food imports. If cut off from interplanetary trade, their growing population suffers. If even a single station or dome is struck, parts of the population starve.
Why does it have to be fragile? Why can't a closed system, with no chance of external contamination because it's isolated by vacuum, have a less fragile experience? Temperature is regulated exactly right and does not depend on weather. Irrigation (if not already using hydroponics) is assured at a steady and predictable rate.
And why does it have to be overly expensive to do that? If you want to have assured food production, you have to do artificial irrigation anyway and not be left to the whims of the weather. Manticore is blessed with a very warm and mild climate, and we're told that Masada is also pretty good, but that is not true of the other planets in the MBS and we have little clue whether the rest of the planets in the HV are good for open-air agriculture or not. I suspect the author intended that they mostly are, but that's statistically improbable.
From the Stephanie Harrington stories, we do know that Sphinx required bio-forming to ensure that human-edible food would grow on the planet, with the nutrients found there (that's Marjorie Harrington's job and she's probably the biggest reason why the family immigrated into the Star Kingdom then, more than Richard's job). We also know that the Manticore System bio-compatibility with humanity is uncommonly high, which is what caused the Plague Years in the first place. So I argue that on almost every world in the HV, you have a non-negligible cost of setting up and keeping up agriculture on the planet. This cost may be lower than the initial cost of doing so in space, but I'd argue that unless you cover practically the entire planet, which a young colony can't and won't do, you have an on-going cost to keep it up. That may be comparable or even higher than running a space station. This could mean space farming could pay itself off sooner than on-ground agriculture.
Plus, farming in space means you can keep large tracts of your new colony intact, for studies and preservation.
I'm not disputing that growing food in the Yeltsin System, wherever that is, isn't on the expensive side of the galactic average. I'm questioning whether it's THAT expensive.
I'm also questioning whether they're one dome or station away from starvation. They had a backwards technology base in some areas, but they weren't stupid. They should know that they needed to have spare production to account for potential problems. And even if they were so close to the brink in the late 1800s, they shouldn't be now. If this problem had been dire, the first thing that they'd have done when joining the Alliance is to reduce it, before building cruisers and battlecruisers, let alone designing the Benjy class SD. As much as I'm disagreeing with Relax's arguments, I am agreeing that a polity that neglects feeding their population in favour of military investment can't remain in power for long (except authoritarian regimes with external forces propping it up, like North Korea).
Yes, Skydomes is building large domes where massive regions are protected from the elements and can be decommed and farmed - also artificially. It will take years to pay off the domes, and All water will need to be decontaminated before use, and every inch of land will need to be fully fertilized for every crop, (making it more expensive to farm than any space on Earth, even Bolivia). Continued expansion of Skydomes will eventually make Grayson less reliant on the space farms and foreign food sources, but expanded land just makes Grayson more reliant on sources of fertilizer.
BTW, what is the cost of farming in Bolivia in the 1910s PD? How is the Earth government feeding a population of 40 billion in-system? Mind you they had a nuclear war only one thousand years before, so there may be regions on the planet that are still radioactive, or need decontamination like Grayson does. And yet they have a population 13x times that of the Yeltsin System.
I'd argue they're doing that with space farms too.
I'd even argue that that's what Beowulf is likely doing. They had those huge habitats in orbit, with a population measured in the tens of millions. However, I grant you my argument falls a little apart here because Honor should have been aware of this facet of the Sigma Draconis system economy. She'd not be as familiar with it as she was with the MBS one, but she had visited her relatives there a few times, and Sigma Draconis & League economy were probably a regular part of the Manticore education system.
So any distortion in trade - any damage to a dome or space farm - will jeopardize the Grayson economy. And I doubt Grayson is willing to risk economic ties to the Manticorian Alliance, or endanger themselves militarily, in pd 1914.
I'm not disputing the conclusion. It's clearly better for Grayson to remain in the Alliance than to exit it (quod vide Brexit).