GRSV Blog no. 10
Release date: 04/03/2022
CL Laxmipathi Gowda, V Ramanatha Rao, SV Raghuram Shetty, and MJ Vasudeva Rao
Recently, interest in Natural Farming (NF) has surged, spearheaded by the Government of India (GOI). The principles of natural farming are rooted in the concepts defined by Surapala’s Vrikshayurveda (1000 CE), the ancient Indian “science of plant life.” In fact, early agriculture anywhere on the globe could be called as natural farming.
Dr Neelam Patel, senior adviser, India’s NITI Aayog, has said that over 0.65 million hectares of agricultural land in 11 states in India is already under this form of natural farming (Indian Express, 27 January 2022). But the figure could be much higher, as most of the low-input agriculture by resource-poor smallholder farmers can be called “natural farming by default”. The GOI’s budget proposals also recommend the adoption of chemical-free NF along the 5 km-wide corridors of the Ganga river basin. Farmers who adopted NF in some states in India (such as Andhra Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, and Sikkim) have claimed higher yields and low cultivation costs; but the validation of those claims is still awaited, in terms of increases in larger-scale production, productivity, and economics, as well as in meeting the needs of environmental sustainability.