Showing posts with label non-pesticides management. Show all posts
Showing posts with label non-pesticides management. Show all posts

Sunday, December 5, 2021

Andhra Pradesh shows how to fix the broken food systems


Andhra Pradesh's Community Managed Natural Farming 
Pic courtesy: Scroll.in 

Several years ago, I requested the then Director General of the Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR) to visit some villages in Andhra Pradesh where a unique community managed system, based on no application of chemical pesticides, was emerging as a new social movement.

He listened to me patiently, wanting to know more about how the concept of Non-Pesticides Management (NPM) had caught up with farmers’ imagination, so much so that the transformation towards a safe and healthy farming system was quietly expanding. I must acknowledge that soon after putting down the phone, he asked the Directorate of Research at Hyderabad to depute a team of scientists to visit a few villages to make a preliminary assessment. A couple of days later, he called up to say that the report he received showed positive and significant behavioural changes necessitating a shift from established farming practices. 

Why I am narrating this story is to explain how early one could see the enormous possibilities the NPM system was likely to throw. It has taken several years, but it is heartening to know that what began as a small initiative is now being seen globally as a beacon of hope.

The Community Managed Natural Farming (CMNF) programme, as it is now called, has spread to 3,780 villages with more than 700,000 farmers in 13 districts showing the way. In fact, to the best of my understanding CMNF has emerged as probably the world’s biggest agro-ecological farming system. So much so that the Global Alliance for the Future of Food has in its latest report True value: Revealing the positive impacts of food system transformation listed it among the six global initiatives that have the potential to fix the broken food systems, and thereby lay a foundation for a change the world is keenly looking forward to.

Using the True Cost Accounting methodology that was developed on the lines of what was suggested in the report of The Economics of Ecosystem Services of Biodiversity (TEEB) that the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) has perfected over the years; natural farming practices in Andhra Pradesh are now being practiced on 800,000 hectares. Operating under a decentralised farming system, the programme runs through a government-owned non-profit Rythu Sadhikara Smstha (RySS). With 12,500 village councils, each looking after a cluster of 2000 households, the success of the programme lies on a peer-to-peer approach where a locally-identified team of 3 lead farmers – a master farmer, a natural farming fellow, and an outreach extension specialist – advise and guide fellow farmers. 

As the report acknowledges, the role women groups have played in incorporating natural farming principles in local society and culture is exemplary. If you have to know how women power can transform a society, you have to come and see how 7 million women have formed 652, 440 self-help groups, referred generally as ‘spiritual capital” of the natural farming movement, have taken over decision-making. In my travels, I have always been left amazed by the sheer strength of women power, with these groups distributing loans, managing input supplies, organising storage and processing, and helping in knowledge dissemination. You have to be at the meetings of the self-help groups to know what steers the natural farming movement, and how they act as the pillar of strength. 

Dr G V Ramanjaneyulu, Executive Director of the Centre for Sustainable Agriculture, Hyderabad, a passionate proponent of the NPM approach, and someone who believes in agro-ecological farming systems, had first taken me around to show the strength of women SHGs. Among the 38 NGOs engaged with the CMNF programme, CSA was the front-runner to have converted an entire village in Warangal district to not only go organic but also to form a cooperative. Since then six more such organic villages have come up. 

With no chemical pesticides and reduced fertiliser application, the usual illness cases have dropped by 86 per cent and it has brought about a reduction in the health expenses an average of 50 per cent per household. Considering the increased medical expenses is one of the primary reasons behind increasing farm suicides in the country, the CMNF approach is probably the way forward to pull farmers out of the vicious debt trap. And let’s not forget, with 68 per cent reduction in cost of cultivation and with 88 per cent farmers showing statistically significant increase in crop yields, farm income has increased from 8 to 111 per cent depending upon the kind of cultivation undertaken. But that does not mean, agro-ecological farming systems do not need income support. These farmers need to be paid for environmental protection, and for their role in preserving ecosystem services. 

While crops need 55 per cent less water and electricity, resulting in 55 to 99 per cent lower emissions, the natural farming system has saved Rs 12.3-lakh crore every year by way of costs that are avoided in managing degraded lands. But what may be difficult to measure economically are the indirect but ever-lasting benefits that accrue. With 43per cent farmers reporting an increase in earthworms, and 52 per cent reporting softened soils, and 36 per cent saying the green cover has increased, what I find fascinating is that 95 per cent people acknowledge that the food taste has improved, and with 70 per cent of the chemical-free food being consumed locally, the nutritious intake has also improved, including a remarked improvement in dietary fibres. 

With Minister for Agriculture Kurasala Kannababu now promising a policy frame work for organic agriculture and natural farming, I am sure the numerous hiccups that CMNF encounters, including reports of non-payment of salaries to the staff, are immediately taken care of. The programme also requires more budgetary support to meet the target of converting the entire farming population go chemical free in the next few years. 

Every successful transformation that the world has witnessed actually hinges around a powerful catalyst. While it was scientist-turned-environmentalist Parshu Ram Mishra in case of the Sukho-Majri model in the Shivalik hills in the mid-1980s, a senior bureaucrat Vijay Kumar Thillam, now retired and presently the co-chair of RySS, is the moving spirit behind the remarkable transition witnessed in Andhra Pradesh. Taking up a challenge that is not only path-breaking, he has effectively brought about a transformation that should be viewed as what ‘smart agriculture’ means. That’s a transformation that Andhra Pradesh should be proud of. And that’s a transformation that provides a sustainable pathway for the future of food. #

Source: How Community Managed Natural Farming can fix broken food systems. The Hans India. Oct 24, 2021. https://www.thehansindia.com/business/how-community-managed-natural-farming-can-fix-broken-food-system-712223

 

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Wednesday, May 1, 2019

Towards an Organic Future


Its high time to move to agro-ecological farming systems. 
Pic -- from the Web

At a time when global temperatures are soaring, a latest study by a French think tank – Sustainable Development and International Relations (IDDRI) – has shown that agro-ecological farming alone has the potential to reduce greenhouse gas emissions in Europe by 47 per cent and thereby keep global temperature rise below 2 degrees.  

This study comes at a time when the Food and Agricultural Organisation of the United Nations (FAO) is already talking of green direct payments to organic farmers who opt for sustainable farming practices. At the Regional Symposium on Agro-ecology for Sustainable Agriculture and Food Systems for Europe and Central Asia, 2016, one of the policy recommendations was to shift 30 per cent of the European budget on agriculture to green direct payments. The IDDRI study in addition shows that a transition from intensive farming to agro-ecological farming will bring down the pesticides consumption by 380,000 tonnes per year in European farming.

And yet I find that most climate mitigation studies point to more crop intensification, which will expectedly lead to freeing up larger proportion of cultivable lands and thereby claim to ensuring there is no drop in food production. In other words, it is push for a hyper-intensive farming system that leads to more toxic soils, more water mining sucking the remaining aquifers dry, and leading to more contamination of the food chain. This flawed assumption was essentially behind the launch of the New Vision for Agriculture at the World Economic Forum 2009 aiming at increasing food production by 20 percent, decreasing greenhouse gas emissions per ton by 20 percent, and reducing rural poverty by 20 percent every decade.

The 17 agribusiness giants that would spur the launch of New Vision for Agriculture includes Archer Daniels Midland (ADM), BASF, Bunge Limited, Cargill, Coca-Cola, DuPont, General Mills, Kraft Foods, Metro AG, Monsanto Company, Nestlé, PepsiCo, SABMiller, Syngenta, Unilever, Wal-Mart, and Yara International. In other words, it is more of the same leading to more catastrophic outcomes in the future.

The IDDRI study provides a lot of hope at a time when the UN-sponsored TEEB initiative – The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity – for agriculture and food, has in its latest study warned of a significant contribution to greenhouse gas emissions emanating from farming practices. Accordingly, the entire farming production systems, stretching from cutting down of forests for making land available for cultivation to food waste dumped in landfills, account from 47 to 51 per cent of the global gas emissions. This factor alone plays a prominent role in world’s climate going topsy-turvy, and which returns to haunt farming community reeling under the terrible impact of climate change. The challenge therefore is how to reduce the greenhouse gas emissions from agriculture, which becomes a surer form of mitigation for farmers from the chaotic implications from climate aberrations haunting them in the years to come.

What is therefore of paramount importance is to bring in policies that help farmers to transit to a more climate resilient agriculture. Before apologists for Green Revolution kind of farming systems raise on uproar over declining food production from a shift to organic farming, it is important to know that in its earlier study along with the UK-based Soil Association, the IDDRI has in a report entitled ‘Ten Years of Agro-ecology in Europe’ clearly showed that it is possible to feed Europe a healthy and sustainable diet by transiting to natural farming systems. Earlier, an International Assessment for Agricultural Knowledge, Science and Technology for Development (IAASTD) report, which was ratified (India included) during an intergovernmental plenary in Johannesburg, April 7-12, 2008, had warned that ‘business as usual’ is not the way forward.

Over the years, an emerging consensus has developed around agro-ecology, which alone has the potential for an inclusive approach, and has immense ability to reduce the damage being done to the planet. In India, a major initiative was launched when village elders in Punnukula village in Khamam district in Andhra Pradesh came together to stop the use of chemical pesticides. This was way back, more than 15 years ago. This local initiative, and exemplary testimony to the richness of available local knowledge, led to the introduction on Non-Pesticides Management (NPM) under the Community Managed Sustainable Agriculture (CMSA) expanding to 3.6 million acres without the use of pesticides. After the State’s bifurcation, and driven by the enthusiasm shown in adopting NPM practices, Andhra Pradesh launched Zero Budget Natural Farming aiming to bring its nearly 60-lakh farmers under the fold of non-chemical agriculture by the end of the year 2024.

Surprisingly, there is no drop in crop productivity. Just a year after the introduction of ZBNF, a study by Rythu Sadhikara Samstha  (RySS) based on crop cutting experiments showed that crop yields in fact had gone up from 10 to 69 per cent – 10 per cent in irrigated paddy and the highest 69 per cent in brinjal. Since wheat is not grown in south India, it is not possible to know the impact on wheat yield when grown without chemicals but I am sure suitable farming practices can be evolved that keeps productivity at par. More so in a state like Punjab, which ironically being the country’s food bowl still imports a significant proportion of its wheat atta requirement. Much of the attathat is imported is from Madhya Pradesh considered to be free of chemicals. I fail to understand why can’t instead Punjab focus on organic wheat production within the state if the domestic demand is so heavy.

This will require a paradigm shift in the way agricultural research is being conducted. All these years for instance crop varieties have been evolved based on its response to chemical fertilizers and pesticides. It’s time to move to organic breeding, developing future crop varieties responding to organic manure, less water and needing no chemical pesticides. This has to be followed by adequate reforms in agricultural markets, providing a higher price for organics and also providing for exclusive procurement of organic produce coupled with policies that encourage farmers to make the transition. With soaring demand for safe and healthy food, mainline agriculture research has no option but to keep pace with the changing times.

According to Friends of Earth, in Europe alone, climate change has taken the lives of more than 115,000 people since 1980, causing an economic loss of Euro 453 billion. In the global south, floods, drought, heatwaves and other extreme climate related events/disasters results in hundreds of thousands of people dying every year. Instead of just blaming the weather gods, the time has come to urgently reform the prevalent farming systems so as to move away from intensive cultivation that has denuded soils, mined groundwater and is increasingly leading to desertification. #  

Towards an Organic Future. The Tribune. May 1, 2019

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