Agriculture
plays a crucial role in ensuring food security while also accounting
for a significant share of India’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP). It
engages almost two-thirds of the workforce in gainful employment.
Several industries such as sugar, textiles, jute, food and milk
processing etc. depend on agricultural production for their requirement
of raw materials.
Presently, the threat of climate change poses a challenge for
sustainable agricultural growth. This threat is compounded due to
accumulated greenhouse gas emissions in the atmosphere,
anthropogenically generated through long-term intensive industrial
growth and high consumption lifestyles and preferences. While the
international community is collectively engaging itself to deal with
this threat, India needs to evolve a national strategy for adapting to
climate change and its variabilities in order to ensure ecological
sustainability in its socio-economic developmental priorities.
Thus the National Mission for Sustainable Agriculture (NMSA) was
launched in 2008 with the objective of promoting Sustainable
Agriculture.
The thrust areas to be addressed under this Mission are dryland
agriculture, access to information, bio-technology and risk management.
This National Mission would cover both adaptation and mitigation
measures in the domain of crops and animal husbandry, including
research.
Sustainable agriculture is the practice of farming using principles of
ecology. Sustainable agriculture integrates three main goals-
Environmental (environmental health), Social (social and economic
equity) and Economic (economic profitability).
Sustainability means conserving an ecological balance by avoiding
depletion of natural resources. Sustainability creates and maintains the
conditions for the perfect harmony between the man and the environment
as the Agriculture is being as the closest profession of man with the
nature, it needs to be well tuned with the surrounding environment.
Prime Minister’s Council identified Department of Agriculture &
Cooperation and DARE to play the role of Lead Agency for preparation of
Mission Document on NMSA. NAPCC has identified the following focus areas
(Thirst areas) for NMSA – Dry land Agriculture, Risk Management, Access
to Information, Use of Bio- technology.
Priority Areas as indicated in NMSA under the NAPCC are:
Rainfed Agriculture
1. Development of drought and pest-resistant crop varieties.
2. Improving methods to conserve soil and water to ensure theirs optimal utilization.
3. Generate awareness through stakeholder
consultations, training workshops and demonstration exercises for
farming communities, for agro-climatic information sharing and
dissemination.
4. Financial support to enable farmers to invest in and adopt relevant technologies to overcome climate related stresses.
|
Risk Management
1. Strengthening existing agricultural and weather insurance mechanisms.
2. Development and validation of weather
derivative models by insurance providers. Ensure access to archival and
current weather data for this purpose.
3. Creation of web-enabled, regional language based services for facilitation of weather based insurance.
4. Development of GIS and remote-sensing methodologies for detailed soil resource mapping and land use planning.
5. Mapping vulnerable eco-regions and identification of pest and disease hotspots.
6. Developing and implementation of region-specific contingency plans based on vulnerability and risk scenario. |
Access to Information
1. Development of regional database of soil, weather, genotypes, land-use patterns and water resources.
2. Monitoring of glacier and ice-mass,
impacts on water resources, soil erosion, and associated impacts on
agricultural production in mountainous regions.
3. Providing information on off-season
crops, aromatic and medicinal plants, greenhouse crops, pasture
development, agro-forestry, livestock and agro-processing.
4. Collation and dissemination of
block-level data on agro-climatic variables, land use and socio-economic
features and preparation of state-level agro-climatic atlases. |
Promoting Data Access
1. To improve and expand the data bases on
(a) Soil profile, (b) Area under cultivation, Production and yield, and
(c) Cost of Cultivation.
2. To digitize data, maintain database of global quality, and streamline the procedure governing access there to
3. To build public awareness through “National Portal” on agricultural Statistics.
|
Use of Bio – technology
1. Genetic engineering to convert C-3 crops
to the more carbon responsive C-4 crops to achieve greater
photosynthetic efficiency for obtaining increased productivity at higher
levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere and to sustain thermal
stresses.
2. Development of strategies for low input
sustainable agriculture by producing crops with enhanced water and
nitrogen use efficiency which may also result in reduced emissions of
greenhouse gases, and crops with greater tolerance to drought, high
temperature, submergence and salinity stresses.
3. Development of nutritional strategies
for managing heat stress in dairy animals to prevent nutrient
deficiencies leading to low milk yield and productivity.
4. Development of salt tolerant and disease resistant fresh water fish and prawn. |
|
No comments:
Post a Comment