Substantial increase of acreage under organic cultivation in some districts
Amid allegations that a project conceived in 2010 to
phase out agriculture driven by synthetic fertilizers and pesticides by
2025 has fallen by the wayside, acreage under organic agriculture is
showing promise as more and more farmers are taking up the cause of
getting rid of synthetic fertilisers and pesticides.
Numbers
from some of the districts show that there is substantial acreage under
organic cultivation (both certified and uncertified).
A
senior official of the department of agriculture said Kasaragod
district, where pesticide endosulfan has caused major health problems,
has 3,482 hectares (involving more than 6,000 farmers) under organic
cultivation.
Fifty-two farm clusters and 30 demonstration plots have been established to help farmers understand organic farming.
However,
the achievement of Kasaragod appears to be at the cost of other
districts in the state, alleges R. Sreedhar of Thanal, a
Thiruvananthapuram-based voluntary agency involved in promoting organic
agriculture and in training farmers.
There was nothing wrong in focussing on the problems of Kasaragod. But the organic farming thrust should be aimed at the entire
State, he says as he felt that the funds for other districts are now being directed to the Kasaragod programme.
An
official at the department of agriculture says the government has
allocted Rs. 10 crore for the organic agriculture drive in the district
and provided another five crore for setting up eco shops in six blocks
of the Kasaragod district.
The other programmes in
the district include certification of farms as organic through the
Internal Control System, where farmers inspect each others’ farms to
ensure that the good agricultural practices are followed.
Mr.
Sreedhar says that the push to give Kerala agriculture a new direction
through the 2010 Kerala Organic Farming Policy appeared to have been
forgotten. The only step that has been taken is the ban on 20
pesticides, which came in 2010, as part of the organic agricultural
policy. There has been no follow-up action.
Regardless
of government intervention, Wayanad district has seen considerable
progress in bringing agriculture under organic practices. Around 5,000
hectares have come under organic agriculture, most of it uncertified, in
the district, involving around 10,000 farmers.
An
official of the department of agriculture says that Wayanad had 7,569
farmers and 990 hectares certified as organic. In two to three years
another 5,338 hectares will be certified.
Wayanad
farmers’ march into the big league of organic cultivation has been
helped by voluntary agencies like Wayanad Social Service Society. John
Choorapuzhayil, director of the agency run by the Catholic Church, says
the society has been involved in organic cultivation and export of
produces since 1999.
He says that the number of
farmers, who have registered for organic cultivation with the society,
has gone up to 10,000 now, nearly 7,000 of them over the last two to
three years. This has been because the society has been engaged in
buying organic produces like coffee, ginger and turmeric at a premium.