Thursday, April 28, 2016

Good agricultural practices and Agrometeorological Advisory Service in Karnataka

Environmentally-friendly farming methods can take us to a more sustainable future, keeping in mind the sustainable development agenda of ending hunger and poverty by 2030
Credit:Cecilia Sanchez/FAO
Environmentally-friendly farming methods can take us to a more sustainable future, keeping in mind the sustainable development agenda of ending hunger and poverty by 2030 Credit:Cecilia Sanchez/FAO

Maize, rice and wheat, the world’s major cereals, can be grown in ways that take into account sustainability for a better future.
book published by the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations advocates “Save and Grow” technique when it comes to farming.
According to the UN food agency, environmentally-friendly farming methods can take us to a more sustainable future, keeping in mind the sustainable development agenda of ending hunger and poverty by 2030.
“We need a global transition to a more resilient and sustainable agriculture that is less dependent on agrochemicals and draws more on natural biological and ecosystem processes,” FAO’s deputy director of plant production and protection division William Murray said.
It has been estimated that by 2050, the annual global demand for maize, rice and wheat will reach almost 3.3 billion tonnes (800 million tonnes).
According to Murray, reaching the target will be more difficult than in the past owing to widespread degradation of farmlands, increasing competition for land and water, stagnation in growth of cereal yields and the impacts of climate change (higher temperatures, intense droughts and flooding).
CREDIT:FAO
The “Save and Grow” practice consists of a set of techniques that advocate natural ecosystem processes to “produce more with less”.
The technique focuses on conservation agriculture, maintaining soil health, selecting crops with higher yield potential and greater resistance to climate change, efficient water management and pest control.
One such example practised in Asia (China) is the rice-fish farming system wherein farmers rear fish in flooded paddy fields.
While on the one hand, the fish can be sold for income or eaten for nutrition, on the other hand, growing fish along with rice helps in controlling fungi and weeds that damage the crop. It thus reduces the need to depend on pesticides.
“Rice-fish is a traditional system that has been largely replaced by intensive rice mono-cropping. We are now seeing, in countries like Indonesia, a revival of aquaculture in rice fields. What “Save and Grow” can contribute is better management of fish stocking and harvesting, which has been shown to increase fish production three times over and increase rice yields by 10 per cent,” Murray told Down To Earth.
Basically, what “Save and Grow” adds to traditional systems is new technologies and practices such as higher-yielding varieties, precision irrigation, needs-based fertilizer management, bio-pesticides and direct-seeding without soil tillage, the FAO agriculture expert added.

'Save and Grow will help achieve SDGs of eliminating poverty and hunger'

William Murray, deputy director of the plant production and protection division at FAO, tells Down To Earth how 'Save and Grow' is helping farmers restore food production, strengthen resilience to climate change and restore terrestrial ecosystems
 
Why does “Save and Grow” emphasise mainly on smallholder farmers growing staple cereals?
Maize, rice and wheat are the world’s most widely-cultivated crops and the foundation of world food security, with an annual production of well over 2 billion tonnes a year. The developing world’s 500 million small-scale and family farmers grow an estimated 80 per cent of the food in those countries. Small-scale farmers in Africa and Central America generally grow maize as a food crop for household consumption and for sale in urban markets. In Asia, rice is mainly a small farmer crop, with almost all of it produced on holdings ranging from 0.5 to 3 hectares. 
What kinds of sustainability improvements are necessary to increase global food production by 2050?
We can restore the health of our soils by inter-cropping cereals with pulses and other legumes to reduce dependence on synthetic fertilizers. There is also a need for improved varieties that are more productive and better adapted to small-holder farming systems (as well as introduce) bio-control of pests to reduce the use of pesticides. 
Does the “Save and Grow” initiative take into account the 2030 SDG target of zero hunger and end to poverty?
Achieving the Sustainable Development Goals requires a global transition to more productive, inclusive and sustainable agriculture. The “Save and Grow approach” is making a contribution to that transition by helping restore production in major grain belts where Green Revolution technologies have faltered, and raising the productivity of low-input farming systems common in Central America and much of Africa. “Save and Grow” will help governments achieve the key SDGs of eliminating poverty and hunger, raise productivity and incomes of smallholders, promote inclusive economic growth, strengthen resilience to climate change and restore terrestrial ecosystems. 
Where do you think climate change will have the most pronounced effects on food yields?
Climate change impacts on agriculture will be most severe for the most vulnerable—the developing world’s small-holder farmers and the billions of low-income urban people. As maize is mainly a rain-fed crop, higher rainfall variability will increase losses in sub-Saharan Africa and Asia. Rice productivity in the tropics is forecast to decline, because many of today’s high-yielding rice varieties are intolerant to abiotic stresses that are likely to be aggravated by climate change. For wheat, the projected increased frequency of short-term high temperatures could have catastrophic effects on yields. The Indo-Gangetic Plains are currently a favourable mega-environment for wheat, but by 2050, more than half of the total area may suffer from heat stress. 
The “Save and Grow approach” is making a contribution to that transition by helping restore production in major grain belts where Green Revolution technologies have faltered
Credit: Cecilia Sanchez/FAO
The “Save and Grow approach” is making a contribution to that transition by helping restore production in major grain belts where Green Revolution technologies have faltered Credit: Cecilia Sanchez/FAO

Is multi-cropping more environmentally sustainable than mono-cropping?
All evidence points to the important role of crop diversification in building more productive, stable and resilient farming systems. For example, rotation of wheat with grain legumes is practised increasingly in rain-fed wheat production areas, especially in soils with low levels of nitrogen, typical of Western Asia and North Africa. The rotation of maize with other crops holds particular promise in increasing resource-use efficiency. Rice-based systems are also becoming increasingly diverse. 
How has the “Save and Grow” practice helped restore production in wheat-growing regions of India? 
Over the past 15 years, farmers in north-west India have been adopting key resource-conserving practices such as zero-tillage, retention of crop residues, raised bed planting of wheat, the dry-seeding of rice, and crop rotations. The adoption of zero-tillage direct-seeding in wheat production has reduced farmers’ costs per hectare by 20 per cent and increased net income by 28 per cent. Till date, zero-tillage appears to have been adopted mainly for the wheat component of the rice-wheat system.
Applied to rice, it would lead to needed reductions in the use of irrigation water. A practical measure that the book recommends is retaining the residues of the harvested rice crop so that it can serve as protective soil cover for the subsequent wheat crop. Today much of the rice straw is still simply burnt. To discourage burning-off and encourage the retention of residues, the governments of Punjab and Haryana are now upscaling a new technology, the “Happy Seeder”, which can drill wheat seed through heavy loads of rice residues.
Is there any way to reduce dependence on cereals by promoting pulses, vegetables and fruits?
Cereals will always be crucial to the human diet—they offer a concentrated source of energy, protein and other nutrients that could be easily stored. “Save and Grow” promotes the diversification of small-holder production to include pulses, fruits and leafy vegetables as well as foods with a high content and bioavailability of nutrients—meat, dairy products, poultry and fish—which address multiple nutrient deficiencies. 
Rice is a water-intensive crop. According to many news sources, India’s groundwater level is depleting fast and the summer monsoon is becoming more and more erratic. Is there a way to reduce water quantity while growing rice? 
Various approaches are being promoted to help farmers increase rice productivity using less water. One is alternate wetting and drying, in which the paddy is flooded and the water is allowed to dry out before re-flooding. Another is aerobic rice where seeds are sown directly into the dry soil and then irrigated. Both approaches result in water savings of 30 to 50 per cent. Another advantage is that by draining rice fields several times during the growing season, we reduce emissions of methane, an important greenhouse gas.

Successful eco-system practices from across the world

Keeping in mind that ecosystems and farm needs vary across the world, the “Save and Grow” concept provides scope to try out innovative farming techniques while at the same time promote sustainability.
The zero-tillage method adopted by farmers in Kazakhstan in Central Asia shows that conservation agriculture can go a long way in increasing wheat yields.
Farmers across the semi-arid steppes of northern Kazakhstan suffered huge losses after the region witnessed one of its worst droughts in 2012.
There was a dip in the country’s wheat harvest, from 23 million tonnes in 2011 to less than 10 million tonnes the following year.
“Ploughing has been the standard practice in wheat production for millennia. Only now, after some 50 years of very intensive mono-cropping in key wheat-producing regions, have the full costs become clear—depletion of soil fertility, loss of soil biodiversity, and soil’s capacity to retain moisture and nutrients,” FAO’s deputy director of plant production and protection division William Murray said.
In Kazakhstan, ploughing contributed to the loss of millions of tonnes of soil annually to wind erosion. The shift to zero or much-reduced tillage since 2000 was accomplished with strong government support with the result that wheat growing is now both more productive and sustainable.
Back in 2012, there were some lucky wheat cultivators who had adopted conservation agriculture—zero tillage, retention of crop residues on the soil surface and crop rotation and they had all the reason to smile.
While the wheat yield failed due to the severe drought, some farmers in Kostanay province achieved yields of two tonnes per hectare, almost double the national average of recent years, that very same year.
Conservation agriculture in northern Kazakhstan’s wheat belt has been driven by necessity, the FAO report says.
The country has vast land resources and is one of the world’s leading producers and exporters of wheat, but the crop relies entirely on precipitation and is vulnerable to loss of soil moisture.
As part of sustainable agriculture, wheat farmers started reducing tillage in the 1960s to cope up with high losses of soil to wind erosion. By the end of the 20th century, minimal tillage was a common practice.
Trials in the north showed that zero-tilled land produced wheat yields 25 per cent higher than ploughed land while labour costs were reduced by 40 per cent and fuel costs by 70 per cent, the report adds.
Today, Kazakhstan ranks among the world’s leading adopters of zero-tillage farming practice. The area of land that is no longer ploughed at all rose from nil in 2000 to 1.4 million hectares by 2008.
Much more attention needs to be given not only to the quantity, but also to the variety and quality of the foods produced and consumed, and this is one of the key concepts of “Save and Grow”.
Credit:Cecilia Sanchez/FAO
Much more attention needs to be given not only to the quantity, but also to the variety and quality of the foods produced and consumed, and this is one of the key concepts of “Save and Grow”. Credit:Cecilia Sanchez/FAO

When it comes to Africa, the Save and Grow approach has contributed to a revival of the traditional practice of growing maize intercropped or rotated with legumes, such as groundnuts, soybeans and pigeon peas.
Legumes are particularly important for restoring soil health and fertility. It is estimated that globally, some 190 million hectares of grain legumes contribute to around 5 to 7 million tonnes of nitrogen to soils.
“The roots of chickpeas and pigeon peas secrete organic acids which can mobilise fixed forms of soil phosphorus and make it more readily available to cereal crops. Legumes also release into the soil hydrogen gas, which is oxidised by soil microbes and further improve soil biology,” Murray said.
According to him, farmers in Bangladesh are growing maize and Napier grass between the two main rice-growing seasons as an efficient way of producing food, earn income and provide fodder for livestock. 
In the Indo-Gangetic Plains of South Asia, farmers have developed a crop rotation system that produces rice during the summer monsoon and wheat during the short winter. However, a major constraint to wheat productivity is late sowing due to late rice harvest. Precious time is also lost owing to the farmers’ practice of thoroughly ploughing the harvested rice fields.
In many areas, the wheat planting date has been brought forward by direct-seeding wherein sowing is done after the paddy harvest with no prior tillage operations. Zero-tillage contributes to higher wheat yields, in the range of 6 to 10 per cent, because it allows for timely sowing and produces a better crop stand.
The impact of Save and Grow practices and technologies is reflected in recent increases in wheat production in India. Following poor yields from 2003 to 2007 in Punjab, wheat productivity has increased steadily and average output exceeded 5 tonnes per hectare in 2012.
While Green Revolution focused on intensive production of maize, rice and wheat and improved the supply of dietary energy, it did not improve overall human nutrition. Much more attention needs to be given not only to the quantity, but also to the variety and quality of the foods produced and consumed, and this is one of the key concepts of “Save and Grow”.
Though “Save and Grow” promotes conservation, it does not entirely take us back to the old days style, a senior FAO official based in Rome said. There is a need to identify genetic species that will productively interact with ecosystems.
And here technology has a vital role to play. One such concept is laser-assisted land-levelling, which reduces water losses by as much as 40 per cent, improves the efficiency of fertilizers and boosts yields by from 5 to 10 per cent.
As states across India are reeling from drought, for the first time, a 24x7 call centre in Karnataka informs farmers about weather conditions, enabling them to cultivate profitably

          Photographs: Jitendra
 Photographs: Jitendra
Kalaswamy, 35, a marginal farmer from Antharasan village of Mysuru, is dialing Varun Mitra, a government call centre helpline which issues weather forecasts for panchayats every 15 minutes. The receiver asks him to name his panchayat and district, and then responds, “There is no possibility of rain for the next three days in your panchayat.” The answer makes Kalaswamy a little disappointed, but ends his uncertainty about rain. In absence of proper information last year, Kalaswamy had invested his meager resources in irrigation, and when rains arrived the next day, it destroyed his crops.

Thanks to Varun Mitra (friend of rain), this year he is not living in uncertainty. “The paddy crop is the only source of food security for my five member family,” he says. “After this forecast, I will replace half my farm with short duration crops like millet or maize, which need less water and grow quickly,” he adds.

Like Kalaswamy, thousands of farmers in Karnataka have tapped into this helpline to know about the weather in their respective panchayats. Karnataka is the only state in India which has developed a mechanism of recording and disseminating weather information right up to the panchayat level, and in real time too, through a 24x7 call centre, which is located in Bengaluru. It provides weather and rainfall updates every 15 minutes.

Forecast for planning

Automatic weather stations are installed at all 747 hoblis (group of panchayats) and rain-gauge meters at 5,625 gram panchayats under a programme called the Weather Monitoring Forecasting and Dissemi-nation System. National weather broadcasts do not provide regional monsoon deficit, so local farmers do not get a warning about the local rainfall scenario. According to the Karnataka State Natural Disaster Monitoring Centre (KSNDMC), 10 out of 33 hoblis are rain deficit.

The success of the initiative can be assessed by the record number of phone calls made by farmers since its inception in 2011. By September 2015, more than 388,820 calls were being made annually. “July is the crucial month for cropping, but the state had a rainfall deficit of more than 40 per cent in the last monsoon,” says C Prabhu, executive director of KSNDMC.
(Extreme
left) Weather
monitoring
stations at gram
panchayats
transfer data
to the server;
Famers like
Kalaswamy
(left) now get
specific weather
information by
interacting with
the help desk
officers at the
call centre
(Extreme left) Weather monitoring stations at gram panchayats transfer data to the server; Famers like Kalaswamy (left) now get specific weather information by interacting with the help desk officers at the call centre


An impact evaluation of the initiative by Bengaluru-based Institute for Social and Economic Change (ISEC) in 2013 found that 90 per cent of farmers, who had called the centre, had called more than five times, and a majority of them had discussions with the help desk officers about the weather conditions.

About 40 per cent farmers used this information to take a decision on when to sow the seeds. And more than 26 per cent farmers used this information to take a decision on irrigation, crop harvesting and threshing timing.

“Farmers are now able to save their resources, time, materials and labour, and more importantly, are able to plan their agricultural activities according to the weather updates,” adds Prabhu. “Generally, small and marginal farmers call us on the helpline,” says Srinivas Reddy, director of KSNDMC.

A unique initiative

The initiative assumes significance as more than two-thirds of the districts in the state have been reeling from a severe drought for the past 15 years. This year too, the state government declared drought in 27 of the 30 districts. What makes the situation worse is that Karnataka has the second largest arid zone in the country, only next to Rajasthan—only 20 per cent of land is cultivable. This forced the state to establish the country’s first Drought Monitoring Cell in 1988. It was renamed KSNDMC in 2007.

The programme was funded by the agriculture flagship programme, Rashtriya Krishi Vikas Yojana (RKVY), under which the Karnataka government established the telemetric weather stations. The data is automatically transferred to the server, and subsequently, information is updated every 15 minutes. The forecasts also record wind-speed, humidity, temperature and rainfall.

Besides, a daily 24-hour rainfall alert is sent to all panchayat offices, as well as the chief minister’s office, the agricultural department and the disaster management department. “Our forecasts have proved correct in more than 80 per cent of the cases, so farmers have started trusting us,” says Prabhu.

As per ISEC’s analysis, most of the callers are from drought-prone areas of north Karnataka, where “dry sowing” due to black soil is widely practised. Farmers sow seeds expecting rains the following week. “So our role becomes vital in suggesting when to sow the seeds or go for dry sowing,” adds Prabhu. Experts say that since RKVY funds are available to other states, they too should adopt Karnataka’s weather forecasting system and help the drought-stricken farmer.

Usage of toilets in India is over 95 per cent, reveals new NSSO survey


          The rapid survey suggests that 42.5 per cent of rural household toilets and 87.9 per cent of urban household toilets have access to water (Photo: Jitendra)
 The rapid survey suggests that 42.5 per cent of rural household toilets and 87.9 per cent of urban household toilets have access to water (Photo: Jitendra)
India’s Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MOSPI) has released the Swachhata Status Report, 2016, which states that the usage of toilets is 95.6 per cent in rural India and 98.8 per cent in urban areas.
These figures were found in a rapid survey conducted by the National Sample Survey Office (NSSO) under MOSPI during May-June 2015. It studied 73,176 rural households and 41,538 urban households. It covered all states of India, except Arunachal Pradesh and Tripura where it could not be conducted due to logistical problems and limited availability of time.
The rapid survey suggests that 42.5 per cent of rural household toilets and 87.9 per cent of urban household toilets have access to water. The survey also talks about solid and liquid waste management. More than 36 per cent of urban areas are reported to be equipped with a proper liquid disposal system. Around 36.7 per cent of villages havepakki nali (permanent drain) and 19 per cent of villages have katchi nali (temporary/non-cemented drain) as drainage arrangement to deal with waste water coming from rural households.
The survey says that an estimated 52.1 per cent of people in rural areas practise open defecation. Among the states surveyed, Jharkhand fares the worst, with Bihar, Madhya Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh and Odisha showing a high rate of open defecation. In urban India, the percentage of persons practising open defecation was much lower at 7.5 per cent.
Percentage of population practicing open defecation in rural areas (Source: Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation)
Percentage of population practicing open defecation in rural areas (Source: Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation)

The report also brings together all relevant information about different sanitation programmes being implemented by the government. Some important findings of the report are as follows:
  • The report says that more than 5.8 million toilets were constructed during the year 2014-15. This exceeds the target of 5 million individual rural household toilets.

Individual rural household toilets constructed over the years (Source: Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation)
Individual rural household toilets constructed over the years (Source: Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation)


  • Rajasthan tops the list in construction of rural household toilets, followed by West Bengal. Besides, 1,109 community sanitary complexes, 25,264 school toilets and 8,377 anganwadi toilets were constructed under Swachh Bharat Mission (Gramin).

School and anganwadi toilets constructed over the years under SBM (Gramin) (Source: Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation)
School and anganwadi toilets constructed over the years under SBM (Gramin) (Source: Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation)


  • More than 4.9 million household toilets were constructed after the launch of Swachh Bharat Mission (Gramin), indicating substantial acceleration in the pace of construction after its launch by Prime Minister Narendra Modi on October 2,
  • It is seen in graphs 2 and 3 that while there has been an increase in individual household toilets over the years, the number of school and anganwadi toilets has drastically decreased.
  • In urban areas, only 1 million toilets were constructed against a target of 4.2 million household toilets until March 31, 2015.
  • The new mission aimed to rope in private and public sector companies for the construction of toilets. Until March 31, 2015, only 3,466 toilets were constructed in schools by corporates, while PSUs constructed more toilets at around 141,000.
  • Around 81,400 toilets were constructed under Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (MGNREGS) in 2015-16 as against 672,000 toilets constructed under the same scheme in 2014-15. The number may have come down as SBM has stopped the convergence of the mission with MGNREGS. A 2015 report published by the Comptroller and Auditor General of India (CAG) finds that there was no convergence of schemes from 2009-12, and between 2012 and 2014, only 6 per cent convergence was observed between the sanitation mission, MGNREGS and Indira Awas Yojana (housing scheme for rural poor).

Drought proofing India

The water level in 91 major reservoirs across the country as on April 13 2016 stood at just 35.839 billion cubic metres as against 253.388 BCM.

(Anil Agarwal, founder editor and director of Down To Earth and the Centre for Science and Environment respectively, wrote this piece in 2000 when India was reeling under one of its worst drought spells. For a detailed analysis of droughts in India, see 2016 Annual State of India’s Environment Report.)
It doesn’t matter how much rain you get, if you do not capture it you can still be short of water. It is unbelievable but it is true that Cherrapunji in Meghalaya which gets 11,000 mm annual rainfall, still suffers from serious drinking water shortage.

Now contrast with this. Just the simple richness of rainwater availability that few of us realise because of the speed with which water, the world’s most fluid substance, disappears. Imagine you had a hectare of land in Barmer in Rajasthan, one of India’s driest places, and you received 100 mm of water in a year, common even for this area. That means that you received as much as one million litres of water —enough to meet drinking and cooking water needs of 182 people at a liberal 15 litres per day. Even if you are not able to capture all that water—this would depend on the nature of rainfall events and type of runoff surface, among other factors —you could still, even with rudimentary technology, capture at least half a million litres a year.

In 1991, India had 587,226 inhabited villages with a total population of 629 million giving us an average population of 1,071 persons per village, up from 942 persons in 1981. Let us, therefore, assume that the average population of an Indian village today is about 1,200. India’s average annual rainfall is about 1,170 mm.

If even only half of this water can be captured, though with technology inputs this can be greatly increased, an average Indian village needs 1.12 hectares to capture 6.57 million litres of water it will use in a year for cooking and drinking. If there is a drought and rainfall levels dip to half the normal, the land required would rise to a mere 2.24 hectares. The amount of land needed to meet the drinking water needs of an average village will vary from 0.10 hectares in Arunachal Pradesh (average population 236) where villages are small and rainfall high to 8.46 hectares in Delhi where villages are big (average population 4769) and rainfall is low. In Rajasthan, the land required will vary from 1.68-3.64 hectares in different meteorological regions and, in Gujarat, it will vary from 1.72- 3.30 hectares (see table: Every village in India can meet its own water needs). And, of course, any more water the villagers catch can go for irrigation.

Does this sound like an impossible task? Is there any village that does not have this land availability? India’s total land area is over 300 million hectares. Let us assume that India’s 587,000 villages can harvest the runoff from 200 million hectares of land, excluding inaccessible forest areas, high mountains and other uninhabited terrains, that still gives every village on an average access to 340 hectares or a rainfall endowment of 3.75 billion litres of water. These calculations show the potential of rainwater harvesting is enormous and undeniable. There is just no reason whatsoever for thirst in India.

Therefore, it is possible to drought proof the entire country. Not just drinking water, most of India’s agricultural fields should also be able to get some irrigation water to grow less water-intensive crops every year through rainwater harvesting.

Source: India Meteorological Department for normal rainfall data and projections of average population in 2000 based on Census of India data for 1981
and 1991.
Source: India Meteorological Department for normal rainfall data and projections of average population in 2000 based on Census of India data for 1981 and 1991.

Thursday, April 7, 2016

Social startups changing landscapes

Climate change has been a heated topic of debate in all circles. While every country wants to look good, they don’t want to accept policies at the cost of their ‘development’. There are conferences globally that talk about new conditions but the decisions and execution remain in the grey area.
There are positive signs though. For instance, the Indian government also announced future campaigns like ‘Fresh air, my birthright’, ‘Save Water, Save Energy’, ‘Grow More Plants’ and ‘Urban green’. On the other hand, the private sector initiatives in the country have already been proactive in the past years to promote a more responsible approach to the environment. Their area of competence varies from waste management to eco-tourism, to organic farming and so on. Here are some of them listed below:
Alternative energy
Yourstory_Caspian_3
Energy is one of the most crucial elements for reducing the Co2 emissions. These enterprises have experimented different ways of producing them
Nokoda is a Bihar based social enterprise which developed a technology to convert waste into energy
Sustain Earth has created a cheap, resistant, and easy-to-use method to generate energy from cows’ manure
Urja Unlimited started from the consideration that “It is ironical that the rural poor pay twice as much as urban consumers for lighting needs” and has developed cheaper solar solutions targeted to them
ONergy operates in East India to provide clean energy solutions to villages
Waste Management
Socialstory_listicle_1
If alternative energy found a broader user base in rural areas, waste management – the most visible symptom of a polluted environment – remains largely an urban problem
Sampurn(e)arth started in Mumbai and expanded to the rest of the country, this social enterprise promote waste recycling as well as waste pickers’ dignity
I Got Garbage operates in Pune, Hyderabad, Vellore, Vizag, Hubli, Dharwad, Mumbai, Kottayam and Pondicherry. Users are encouraged to segregate waste and ‘hire a ragpicker’, who are able to earn more income by selling segregated garbage to different recycling centres.
Green Nerds has engineered a patent pending idea into an automatic garbage machine to segregate waste into easily manageable blocks.
Saahas is a Bengaluru based company that encourages waste management at a hyper local level
Clean Upper Dharamshala Project aims to clean up and recycle waste in Mcleodganj
Paperwaste headquarted in Hyderabad, picks up paper waste from individual households and corporate and take it to the landfil
EcoFemme produces sanitary pads made of fabric which help reduce the problem of disposal
In areas where the IT boom has been particularly prominent (South and West India) e-waste management has become a new concern, as well as a new opportunity for business
BinBag The Assamese Founder of the Bengaluru based start up Achitra Borgohain ensures that through his company e-waste is properly recycled.
Ecoreco has developed a technology to process e waste, being also able to export it
ReNewIt collects computers and other electronic devices disposed by big corporate companies which are still in good conditions. After fixing them and clear the data, they sell it back to the market at a very reasonable price
Eco Tourism
Socialstory_listicle_2
Eco Tourism generally focuses on the first of the three ‘Rs’ (Reduce, Recycle, Reuse), by trying to reduce the amount of waste produced by tourist.
Here you can find two links that list 12 travel social enterprises: link 1 and link 2
Organic farming
SocialStory_Apple_project_fi
Agriculture contributes to 20 per cent of carbon emissions in the world. The Food and Agriculture Organisation of the UN has disclosed that “Organic agriculture not only enables ecosystems to better adjust to the effects of climate change but also offers a major potential to reduce the emissions of agricultural greenhouse gases. Moreover, mixed farming and the diversity of organic crop rotations are protecting the fragile soil surface and may even counteract climate change by restoring the organic matter content.”
In India, some of the organisations involved in Organic Farming are
AgSri has been promoting the Sustainable Sugarcane Initiative (SSI), a set of agronomic practices that involves using less seeds, raising seedlings in a nursery, and following new planting methods, with wider plant spacing, and better water and nutrient management to increase cane yields.
Chetna Organic is working toward implementing organic methods for the cultivation of cotton, which is currently one of the most polluting in the world
Bee The Change taking advantage from the fact that farmers can keep bees only if they grow organic products, the Founder Shrikant Gajbhiye encourages them to introduce the striped insects in their farms. This, in turn, not only offer an additional source of income from the sale of honey and wax, but it helps increasing the annual yield.
The Apple Project works with apple growers in Uttarakhand and Himachal Pradesh and help them become owners of their organic produce.
Urban initiatives
Yourstory_the_living_greens_1
Finally, pollution is a problem that results from the lack of communication between urban and rural worlds. Lack of information about the ‘other reality’ causes several issues like the inability of urban dwellers to distinguish between healthy and chemical products and the lack of access to urban market for organic farmers. These organisations are working in this field
The Living Greens encourages urban dwellers to cultivate their own vegetables on their rooftops to re-gain contact with the food they consume
Daana Network works with cooperatives of organic farmers and provides them with a distributing platform for their products. For the moment they operate in Hyderabad sourcing products from all over south India.
Aura Herbal has created a fashion brand to sell only herbal textiles. They are engaged both in B2B and B2C operations
I Say Organic delivers certified organic products in different Indian cities