Historical experience shows that organization in artificial mate- rial systems adjusts them to the internal harmonious development, to the harmonious development between systems and environmental factors. Disor- ganization, on the other hand, destroys systems and their internal content, breaks ties with the external environment. In this regard, a great responsibility rests with the person, whose balanced actions should regulate the positive and negative processes in systems, subsystems and the environment. That is, care must be taken to ensure that system failures, at least, do not exceed the critical limit, as such a system may perish irreversibly. Theoretical and methodological bases of formation and realization of ecological and economic policy in the conditions of distribution of processes of economic globalization are investigated. The root causes of ecological, economic and social crisis in agricultural land use are analyzed. It is substantiated that the potential of the soil system is revealed only in the harmonious combination of its internal and external environment. It is noted that the soil should be considered as a material system that has its own structure, organization, quality characteristics, and not just as a surface layer of earth. Only in the interaction of internal and external environment (light, heat, moisture, air, relief, time, anthropogenic influences on the soil system) the soil acquires such a property as fertility. It is proved that the essential component of soil energy is humus as a factor in regulating all processes in the soil. This indicates the need to achieve a balance of costs of energy potential of the soil — humus for the formation of biomass crops and soil energy from the environment due to the organic component. A unique model of energy management of the soil system is proposed, which fully provides an answer to overcoming the ecological crisis of the soil. Approaches to the harmonious combination of internal and external environment through a scientifically sound structure of sown areas, crop yields, which allow to find the «golden mean» between the consumption of humus and its accumulation. It has been proven that with the growth of livestock per unit area of arable land there is no correlation with the growth of soil energy. It is claimed that as the number of animals per unit area of arable land increases, the energy content of the soil decreases, which is different from the generally accepted judgments of scientific assets and practitioners of agricultural production.