What is Organic Farming ?
Key Characteristics of Organic Farming :
Types of Organic Farming :
What are the Components of Organic Farming ?
What are Objectives of Organic Farming in India ?
Why Organic Farming is Needed ?
What are the Status of Organic Farming in India ?
Although nascent, the Indian organic food market has begun growing rapidly in last few years. A report by Yes Bank in 2014 said that the organic food sector is growing at about 20% in India, with more than 100 retail organic outlets in Mumbai and about 60 in Bangalore.
What are the Benifits of Organic Farming ?
* Improving Soil Fertility : Soil building practices such as crop rotation, cover crops, and organic fertilizers are Central to organic practices. These practices replenish soil organic matter, feed soil life, reduce erosion, improve soil structure, and enhance nutrient cycling and water retention.
* Improving Water Quality : Organic farming enhanced soil structure, water filtration, and nutrient retention also reduce the risk of groundwater pollution. In many agriculture areas, pollution of groundwater, synthetic fertilizers and pesticides are major difficulties. In some areas where pollution is a real problem, conversion to organic agriculture is highly encouraged as a restorative measure.
* Energy and Climate Change : Organic farming decreases greenhouse gas emission associated with both infield and embedded emission components. Organic agriculture reduces non-renewable energy used by decreasing agrochemicals needs (these require high quantities of fossil fuel to be produced).
* Protection of Biodiversity : The maintenance of planting of natural area within and around organic fields and the absence of chemical inputs create suitable habitats for wildlife and important pollinators and bacterial and insects. Organic farmers are both custodians and uses of biodiversity at all levels.
* For an organic farmers the field is his factory where thousands of beneficial microorganisms and earthworm work all through the day to improve yield and soil fertility. In fact more than the farmer, it is these beneficial organisms which play a vital role in the good growth of the soil.
Challenges of Organic Farming in India :
There are some important challenges facing by the farmers –
* Organic farming has not become popular among the farmers because of the poor awareness about its utility and importance.
* Application of chemical fertilizers, herbicides, insecticide, fungicide, and chemical plant growth regulator are still seen as a progressive approach by the farming community. Agro-chemical manufacturing companies also push their products and methodology much more aggressively.
* Changing attitude from the use of chemical fertilizers, pesticides, and artificial plant growth regulator for ideologically to organic farming is still challenges. The benefits have to immediate for them.
* Inadequate supply of biofertilizers, vermicompost, press mud and other sources of plant originated biopesticides coupled with their quality production.
* This in lack of adequate literature from laboratory to field.
* Small and marginal farmers cannot afford the use certification costs.
* The market for Organic produce in India is still minuscule.
* Lack of coordination between the higher authority to lower authorities.
*There is shortage of easy and cheap accredited certifying agencies in the country so that farmer face a hurdle in the export market.
Government Initiative for Organic Farming in India :
1. Paramparagat Krishi Vikas Yojana (PKVY) :
It is launched in 2015, is an extended component of Soil Health Management (SHM) under the Centrally Sponsored Scheme (CSS), National Mission on Sustainable Agriculture (NMSA). PKVY aims at supporting and promoting organic farming, in turn resulting in improvement of soil health.
The scheme promotes Participatory Guarantee System (PGS) For India (PGS-India) form of organic certification that is built on mutual trust, locally relevant and mandates the involvement of producers and consumers in the process of certification.
- Functional infrastructure for collection, aggregation, grading units and North-Eastern (NE) organic bazaar @ Rs. 15 lakh (75% subsidy).
- Integrated Processing Units with Total Financial Outlay (TFO) of Rs. 800 lakh or more limited to 75% to Farmer Producer Companies (FPCs) and 50% to private entrepreneurs as credit linked back ended subsidy.
- Integrated pack house with 75% subsidy to FPCs on TFO of 50 lakh or more and 50% to private entrepreneurs or maximum of 37.50 lakh whichever is less as credit linked back ended subsidy.
- Transportation/ 4 wheeler up to TFO of 12 lakh (50%).
- Refrigerated transport vehicle/ Pre-cooling/ cold stores/ ripening chambers upto TFO of 25 lakh (75% subsidy to FPC and 50% to private).
3. National Project on Organic Farming :
7. Soil Health Card will provide information to farmers on soil nutrient status of their soil and recommends appropriate dosage of nutrient to be applied for improving soil health and its fertility. Soil health card will be issued every 3 years for all land holdings in the country. Under this scheme, financial assistance is given to State Governments for training of farmers on application of further on soil test basis, amounting to Rs. 24000/- per training.
8. National Centre of Organic Farming, Ghaziabad is organizing the training programmes for farmers in Saansad Adarsh Grams (SAGs) from 2015-16.
9. States Adopting Organic Farming :
* State like Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Gujarat, Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Nagaland, Mizoram, Sikkim have been promoting organic farming. 9 states have drafted organic farming policies. Out of these, four States viz; Uttarakhand, Nagaland, Sikkim and Mizoram have declared their intention to go 100 percent organic.
* Sikkim has achieved its target i.e., 100% organic state in 2015.
* Uttarakhand has declared several districts organic, which means the farmers must undertake only organic farming.
International experts in a Convention Organized on 29 May, 2020, by NITI Aayog (National Institution for Transforming India) endorsed efforts to boost Natural Farming in India : In presence of senior international and national experts and policymakers, Minister of Agriculture Shri Narendra Singh Tomar stated, “natural farming is our indigenous system based on cow dung and urine, biomass, mulch and soil aeration etc. In next five years, we intend to reach 20 lakh hectares in any form of organic farming, including natural farming, of which 12 lakh hectares are under BPKP (Bharatiya Prakritik Krishi Paddhati Programme)”.
Paramparagat Krishi Vikash Yojana launched in 2015 to promote Organic Farming among small and marginal farmers has in last four years covered 7 lakh hectares and 8 lakh farmers.
According to NITI Aayog Vice Chairman Dr. Rajiv Kumar Organic Farming can ‘avoid excessive and wasteful use of wayer, prevent farmers indebtedness, contribute to mitigating greenhouse gases while supporting farmer incomes and their ability to adapt to climate change’.
International experts from the US, UK, Netherlands, CGIAR, Australia, Germany, and of UN acknowledged India’s pioneering leadership in the arena of Organic Farming – It would be a mistake to view natural farming techniques of our forefathers, but rather, as the high level panel of experts report on Organic Farming to the Committee on Food Security of FAO so clearly demonstrated, it is based on cutting-edged science of the future that recognises the need for systemic approaches to dealing with complex adaptive systems that are the basis of a healthy natural world. Working with nature, understanding how to do so will help us ‘build back better’ as one expert noted.
Prof. Ramesh Chand, Member (Agriculture) of NITI Aayog, called for more research to ensure that natural farming could truly live up to its expectations.
Dr. Rajiv Kumar said “…It is not man Vs nature, but man in nature or man with nature. Humans need to realize their responsibility in protecting other species and nature. We need knowledge-intensive agriculture and the metrics need to be redefined where production is not the only criterion for good performance. It has to include the entire landscape and the positive and negative externalities that are generated by alternative forms of agriculture practices”.
Summary :
Avoid Pesticides & Chemicals
Fertilizers
Use biofertilizers
Farmers friendly agriculture
Sustainable Agriculture…
References ~
Yojana & Kurukshetra Government
Pib
Magazine.
Also Read : Start Organic Farming Business
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