Land Coverage Under Organic Farming Adopted by More Farmers From MP, Uttarakhand and Rajasthan!!
Prime Minister Narendra Modi recently urged all states to
join him in making organic farming a national movement. However, natural
farming is practiced by only 3% of Indian farmers, accounting for a modest
fraction of the country's agriculture.
According to projections based on Agricultural Census
2015-16 data for 2018-19, the overall number of landholding farmers in the
country is around 15.11 crore. In this month, the Ministry of Agriculture notified for the Lok Sabha that organic farming had been adopted by 43,38,495 farmers across
the country until 2020-2021. Madhya Pradesh is the most organic
farmers (7,73,902), followed by Uttarakhand, Rajasthan, Andhra Pradesh, and
Maharashtra.
geographical area is 328.7 million hectares
A total of 38.09 lakh hectares have been recognized as
organic (by July 2021). According to the Land Use Statistics 2016-17, the
country's overall geographical area is 328.7 million hectares, with a reported
net sown area of 139.4 million hectares and a gross cropped area of 200.2
million hectares with a cropping intensity of 143.6 percent. The sown net area
accounts for 42.4 percent of the overall geographical area. There are 68.6 million hectares of net irrigated facility land. In light of these numbers, the amount of land used for organic farming is very few.
The Indian government is pushing organic products exports on the international markets. However, exports remain extremely limited. India ranks first in place of organic farmers and ninth in place of organic farming area, according to the government. According to the administration, Sikkim was the first state in the world to become fully organic, and other states such as Tripura and Uttarakhand have set copy of goals.
The Ministry of Agriculture Domestic Effort
In March of this year, the Ministry of Agriculture told the
Lok Sabha that demand for organic farming has surged in the domestic market in
recent years. According to a collaborative study conducted by Assocham and EY,
the domestic organic industry is increasing at a rate of 17%, with estimated
demand for organic food reaching Rs 87.1 crore by 2021, up from Rs 53.3 crore
in 2016.
Since 2015-2016, the government has promoted organic farming through specific initiatives such as the Paramparagat Krishi Vikas Yojana (PKVY) and Mission Organic Value chain Development for North Eastern Region. Both schemes place a strong emphasis on providing organic farmers with end-to-end supports, from production to certification and marketing. if promote organic farmers, these initiatives include post-harvest management helps such as processing, packings, and marketing.
Organic farmers receive a financial support of Rs 50,000 per
acre over three years under PKVY, of which Rs 31,000 (61%) is paid directly
through DBT for inputs such as bio-fertilizers, bio-pesticides, organic manure,
compost, vermi-compost, herbal extracts, and so on.
Organic farming is regarded as a sustainable agriculture techniques because it does not use Artificial inputs. For nutrient management of crops, crop residues, farmyard manure, enhanced composts, vermi-compost, oil cakes, bio-fertilizers, and other materials are utilized. Crop rotation, trap crops, bio-pesticides like neem-based formulations, bio control agents, mechanical traps, stale seedbed, and other environmentally friendly agricultural Procedures are used to control Pests and diseases.
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