We have suffered the scarcity of the socialist years, and surfeited on the excesses of the consumerist age. Perhaps it is time to draw a balance, and arrive at the ethical and intelligent approach of thrift. More>>
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tide is turning. All over the world, farmers and scientists are conceding
that agro chemicals are devastating the soil, water and biodiversity.
And leaving toxic residues in food. But though organically grown produce
is admittedly superior and kinder to the environment, can we get an adequate
amount? Is it "economically viable"?
Farming in harmony with nature, replies Bhaskar Save, "has the blessings
of Annapurna, the goddess of abundant food for all that lives."
This remarkable Indian farmerakin to the Japanese pioneer, Masanobu
Fukuokabased in district Valsad of Gujarat, India, speaks with
quiet conviction, grown from long experience: "One grain of rice
yields several thousand in a short cropping cycle of a few months. The
marital palm can provide 350-400 coconuts every year for a century. A
chikoo (sapota) tree feeds 18 generations descendant from the original
planter. Each can yield 180,000 kg of fruit in its lifetime….Many such
useful plants grow in this country. So why should anyone have to suffer
lack of food or any basic want?" Save's commonsense may seem too embarrassingly
simple if one has not seen his farm.
But who planted the primeval forest? Who tilled, manured and irrigated
it? Can any modern system rival the forest's enormous productivity and
the myriad life forms it supports? For over four millennia, organic
farming in India sustained one of the highest population densities
on this planet. And enabled the prosperity and culture of the great ancient
civilization that fascinated travelers from around the world. There were
no agro chemicals on the scene then.
In Tending the Earth (Earthcare Books), Winin Pereira reveals how
traditional Indian agriculture rates high in all aspects of total productivity,
sustainability, self-reliance, diversity and the depth of its indigenous
knowledge. Much earlier, Sir Albert Howardconsidered by many as
the father of sustainable agriculture in the Westwrote in An
Agricultural Testament: "I regarded these (Indian) peasants as
my professors. I learnt from them how to grow healthy crops without the
slightest help from artificial manures or insecticides."
So what went wrong?
The first reverses came under colonial rule. Large tracts of forest were
felled for timber. Many fertile fields were forced to grow monoculture
cash crops such as opium, tobacco, cotton, indigo, tea coffee for export.
The zamindari system and the high revenue extracted by the British
added to the farmers' woes. Community water resources like tanks were
neglected.
After the British left, Indian agriculture had a brief respite. Influenced
by Mahatma Gandhi's vision of Gram Swaraj or local self-reliance,
K.M. Munshi, India's first agriculture minister, emphasized the restoration
of the fertility and water cycle in each village and bioregion. While
yield increased, much of it was consumed in the rural areas itself. Small
surpluses of mixed, perishable produce from many scattered farm were not
administratively convenient for distant city markets.
But Jawaharlal Nehru's dream of urban-industrial growth could not be pursued
if agricultural surplus came to the cities. Planners said that if farms
could be drawn to use chemical inputs, they would grow marketable produce
for enough cash to enable future purchase of such inputs. Of course, huge
subsides and easy credit were dangled as incentives. Dwarf hybrids of
grain were bought in place of traditional, tall verities that lodged (or
bent over) with the use of artificial fertilizer.
Support prices for such produce were offered. And because irrigation needs
were greatly increased, large dams were built at state expense. Unwary
farmers could hardly suspect then that the increase in their cash income
was at the cost of soil fertility, self-reliance and crop diversity. Inexorably,
they were hooked to the market economy, while their lands were hooked
to the chemicals. The realization slowly dawned the more and more chemicals
were needed with each passing year, just to maintain yields.
Costs were increasing. And so were problems like new diseases, pests and
soil salinity. But changing course was a daunting choice, for without
chemicals, the yield from the crippled soil would dramatically fall. While
healthy nature is never miserly, nature wounded must first heal herself.
Patience is required, or sufficient biomass inputs to hasten the restoration
of soil fertility. For most farmers, neither is easy. They have also lost
their traditional seed varieties, their knowledge of mixed farming methods,
and their self-confidence. Consequently, while disillusionment with chemicals
is near universal, the actual transition to the organic way is still slow
and hesitant. Sheer distress, however, has heightened farmer interest
in alternatives. This is witnessed in the high turnout for workshops on
organic or natural farming.
Several such workshops have been organized in Maharashtra, India, by activists
such as Vasant Palshikar and Vijay Bhatt, featuring, speakers such as
Bhaskar Save, Vasnat Futane and S. Dabholkar. At the national level, the
ARISE network has taken off. ARISE stands for Agricultural Renewal in
India for a Sustainable Environment, and is being coordinated from Auroville,
near Pondicherry. It has a large membership in the south of the country,
and is consolidating in the north. However, NGO activists tend to be more
vocal at joint meetings, while more attention is needed to facilitate
farmer-level exchanges, visits and workshops.
This should ideally be done on a regional basis, but most regional networks
are still at a formative stage. A useful survey of the resurgence of organic
farming in India is provided in The Organic Farming Sourcebook,
recently published by The Other India Press, Goa, India. Several hundred
farmers and their addresses are listed, with brief reports on a number
of them. While a majority of these may be comparatively recent converts
to the organic path, and therefore still recovering, some have stabilized,
and a few enjoy outstanding yields and high profits.
There are, of course, many times more unidentified organic farmers in
India, including adivasis in isolated areas who never took to chemicals
on any significant scale in the first place. Moreover, a number of farmers
who liberally use chemicals for the produce they still prefer to grow
the food their own families eat by the organic way. Rising city and export
demand for organic food and the higher price it commands is now becoming
a strong attraction for resourceful, commercial farmers.
But large-scale production for the market inevitably means extensive monocultures,
more prone to pest damage, soil deficiencies and crop diseases. The temptation
to discreetly use some chemicals again is high, through this may bring
only temporary abatement of symptoms, while the deeper problem worsens.
The government, on its part, seems caught in a schizophrenic mindset.
No long ago, we were told that chemicals were directly needed in farming
practices to feed our growing population.
But faced with a mounting Balance of Payments crisis, the government is
now eager to increase organic agro exports to industrialized nations that
have become wise to the boomeranging of toxins in the food they buy from
us. Ironically, the revenue from organic food exports will help finance
our estimated Rs.38,000 crore Eighth Plan bill for the import of chemical
fertilizer and the naphtha needed to domestically produce it. With the
continuing degradation of the soil, and the diversion of fertile lands
and irrigation waters for cash cropping, it is quite conceivable that
severe domestic food scarcity may raise its ugly head sooner than imagined.
We may then be trapped into importing stale, chemically grown, irradiated
wheat to feed our hungry people, while our best quality organic foods
are exported. It must be acknowledged though that in our age, financial
returns are a powerful incentive for change. Since initial yields with
organic farming are low, farmers need a better price to cope with their
transition. On the consumer side, organic foods are more value for money,
and so deserve a better price, perhaps 25 per cent more at the retail
level.
Middlemen traders usually hog the larger share of the difference between
the price a farmer gets and the price a consumer pays. Cooperative farm
city links between organic growers and buyers can at least halve this
difference., That the food supplied is actually organic is readily verifiable.
A direct relationship is also more human, with attention possible to the
organic food needs of the sick,. The children the pregnant mothers, and
the families of farm workers.
For small, subsistence farmers, their own health and that of the land
is the only incentive for change. Save recommends that it is better to
totally discontinue chemicals on a part of the land than to try using
less chemicals on the entire land. This is slowly happening. As farmers
gradually regain their confidence in the organic way, more land can be
converted in a phased and progressively easier manner. However, history
may unfold more suddenly and rapidly. For a while, a disaster threatened
to happen during the Gulf War.
As the prices of fossil fuelsthe basic raw material in chemical
fertilizersmounted, and our foreign exchange reserves ran dry, it
seemed that the free supply of liberally subsidized agro chemicals would
grind to a halt, leaving no option but to revert to organic farming all
over the country. The moment passed, but may appear again as the oil reserves
of the world continue to diminish. A return to organic farming seems inevitable.
We can ease the way by brushing up our natural resource literacy, and
focusing on health rather than ballooning the economy with more hot air.
A good preparation would be to plant food trees, of which we have hundreds
of species.