<p style="margin-bottom:10px"><p></p></p> <p style="margin-bottom:10px">A recent study by the Council on Energy, Environment and Water (CEEW) found that less than 4% of Indian farmers have adopted sustainable agricultural practices and systems. Thus, sustainable agriculture is far from mainstream in India, with most sustainable agriculture practices and systems being practised by less than five million farmers. Scaling up sustainable agriculture would be critical to improve farm incomes and bolster India's nutrition security in a climate-constrained future.</p> <p class="text-align-center" style="margin:0cm;margin-bottom:.0001pt"><p></p></p>
The study supported by the Food and Land Use Coalition (FOLU) indicates that there is a need to rethink agricultural practices and how we grow food and what we eat. It provides an overview of the current state of sustainable agriculture practices and systems in India.
It aims to help policymakers, administrators, philanthropists, and others contribute to an evidence-based scale-up of sustainable agriculture practices and systems, which represent a vital alternative to conventional, input-intensive agriculture in the context of a climate-constrained future. States such as Andhra Pradesh and Sikkim have already taken a lead in sustainable agriculture.
<p>Sustaining agriculture has the potential to help diversify farmers' sources of food and income, make farming climate-resilient, optimise use of natural resources and re-build ecosystems. It also offers a vital alternative to input-intensive farming. It is also suitable in drier regions of the country as it requires lesser water.</p>
The study is based on an in-depth review of 16 sustainable agriculture practices and systems such as agroforestry, crop rotation, rainwater harvesting, organic farming, natural farming, integrated farming systems and conservation agriculture - using agroecology as an investigative lens. . It also included a primary survey with 180 civil society organisations promoting sustainable agriculture, as well as 40 plus consultations with stakeholders such as the government and agriculture institutions.
<p>Crop rotation is the most popular sustainable agriculture practices and systems in India, covering around 30 million hectares (Mha) of land and approximately 12 million farmers. Agroforestry, mainly popular among large cultivators, and rainwater harvesting have relatively high coverage - 25 Mha and 20-27 Mha, respectively.</p>
Source: Authors compilation from literature, Stakeholder consultations, and estimations thereof. *The area and adopters can be updated with newer information if available. Note: * Based on estimates from literature and stakeholder discussions **The geographic spread is the indicative number of states where a non-negligible number of farmers adopts a SAPSs (say, at least a thousand farmers) # No of adopters (farmers) are deduced from the area under that SAPSs divided by the average landholding size for the kind of farmers majorly undertaking that SAPSs 1: Primarily comprises estimates pertaining to micro-irrigation 2: Estimates include areas under partial CA. 3: For crop rotation, estimates include cereal-cereal rotation 4: Estimates are based on the water conservation activities allocated under the Integrated Watershed Management Programme. The area estimates pertain to the watershed development area and not only the farm area. 5: Includes plantation crops having leguminous cover crops 6: Excludes intercropping in horticultural crops 7: Includes states that practice mixed cropping
<p>The existing literature critically lacks long-term assessments of sustainable agriculture practices and systems across all three sustainability dimensions (economic, environmental and social). Other research limitations include a research gap concerning landscape, regional or agroecological-zone level assessments and a relative lack of focus on evaluation criteria such as biodiversity, health and gender.</p>
<p>Role in food and nutrition security: sustainable agriculture practices and systems improve farmers’ food security by diversifying their food and income sources. They also enhance nutrition security for families subsisting on agriculture. However, both these aspects call for further research.</p>
<p>Restructure government support to farmers by aligning incentives towards resource conservation and by rewarding outcomes such as total farm productivity or enhanced ecosystem services rather than just outputs such as yields.</p>
<p>Make sustainable agriculture visible by integrating data and information collection on sustainable agriculture practices and systems in the prevailing national and state-level agriculture data systems.</p>
The study can be accessed here
Citation: Gupta, Niti, Shanal Pradhan, Abhishek Jain and Nahya Patel. 2021. Sustainable Agriculture in India 2021 – What we know and how to scale up. New Delhi: Council on Energy, Environment and Water.