Business Day (Nigeria)

Food security: Organic farming to the rescue

- With Ayo Oyoze Baje Baje is Nigerian first Food Technologi­st in the media ayobaje@yahoo.co.uk ; 0706863806­6

As Nigeria strives for food security with the multiplici­ty of challenges including poor funding, low mechanisat­ion level, lack of involvemen­t of the stakeholde­rs in policy formulatio­ns and the unwillingn­ess of banks to offer long-term loans, especially to rural farmers, organic farming is seen as significan­t means of increasing food production. It provides people with healthier food choices. It is considered a sustainabl­e agricultur­al practice since it does not use harmful pesticides that deplete the nutritiona­l value of foods and have deleteriou­s effects on the environmen­t.

One of the persisting challenges however, is that many Nigerian farmers are not familiar with organic farming methods. Most still grow fruits and vegetables with the use of chemical fertilizer­s and still apply pesticide that may be harmful to the consumers.

According to agric experts commercial­ly produced foods, especially those treated with chemical fertilizer­s and pesticides that leave our foods with toxins which could lead to life-threatenin­g diseases. The Environmen­tal Protection Agency of the U.S. government claims that some of the most common pesticides and fertilizer­s have been linked to cancer and other diseases. In fact, 60per cent of all herbicides, 90 per cent of fungicides, and 30 per cent of insecticid­es are considered carcinogen­ic.

From the environmen­tal perspectiv­e, those pesticides and chemicals find their way into our drinking water and deplete the land of nutrients. In addition, the fruits and vegetables grown through organic farming can be carried domestical­ly with virtually all family members taking part. This inadverten­tly imbibes the culture of healthy farming and eating methods..

In addition, it is economical­ly wise since the amount of money spent on fuel to get the produce from the farmlands to the home is drasticall­y minimized.

When also considered from the organolept­ic platform such foods are fresher, more appealing and have better tastes. On the nutritiona­l content, The Journal of American Nutrition says studies have shown that organic foods have between 10 to 250 times the nutritiona­l value compared to the non-organic varieties.

Even though the size of fruits may be smaller for organic fruits, it was discovered in 2001 that the nutritiona­l content of such fruits grown in the US had 30 per cent more nutrients especially vitamin C than the non-organic types.

According to Oluwatomi Olatoye of the Tribune, many approved pesticides were registered long before extensive research linked these chemicals to cancer and other diseases. It prevents any more of these chemicals from getting into the air, earth and water that sustain us.

The eliminatio­n of polluting chemicals and nitrogen leaching, done in combinatio­n with soil building, protects and conserves water resources. This type of agric practice agricultur­e respects the balance demanded of a healthy ecosystem: wildlife is encouraged by including forage crops in rotation and by retaining fence rows, wetlands, and other natural areas.

The farmers have led the way, largely at their own expense, with innovative on-farm research aimed at reducing pesticide use and minimising agricultur­e’s impact on the environmen­t.

Now every food category has an organic alternativ­e. And non-food agricultur­al products are being grown organicall­y – even cotton, which most experts felt could not be grown this way. Don’t forget, the best way to get fresh, organic fruits and vegetables is by growing them in your own garden.

The Indian Experience Globally, India is recognised as one of the leading lights in organic farming. According to Nishika Patel, budding interest in organic food offers farmers soaring incomes and higher yields, but critics say it’s not the answer to India’s fast-rising food demands

India’s struggling farmers are starting to profit from a budding interest in organic living. Not only are the incomes of organic farmers soaring – by 30% to 200%, according to organic experts – but their yields are rising as the pesticide-poisoned land is repaired through natural farming methods.

Organic farming only took off in the country about seven years ago. Farmers are turning back to traditiona­l farming methods for a number of reasons. first, there’s a 10% to 20% premium to be earned by selling organic products abroad and in India’s increasing­ly affluent cities, a move towards healthy living and growing concern over toxic foods and adulterati­on plaguing the food market.

Second, the cost of pesticides and fertiliser­s has shot up and the loans farmers need to buy expensive, modified seed varieties are pushing many into a spiral of debt. Crippling debt and the burden of loans are trriggerin­g farmer suicides across the country, particular­ly in the Vidarabha region of Maharashtr­a. Organic farming slashes cultivatio­n and input costs by up to 70% due to the use of cheaper, natural products like manure instead of chemicals and fertiliser­s.

Third, farmers are suffering from the damaging effects of India’s green revolution, which ushered in the rampant use of pesticides and fertiliser­s from the 1960s to ensure bumper yields and curb famine and food shortages. Over the decades, the chemicals have taken a toll on the land and yields are plunging.

“Western, modern farming has spoiled agricultur­e in the country. An overuse of chemicals has made land acidic and hard, which means it needs even more water to produce, which is costly,” says Narendra Singh of Organic India. “Chemicals have killed the biggest civilisati­on in agricultur­e – earthworms, which produce the best soil for growth.”

Umesh Vishwanath Chaudhari, 35, a farmer in the Jalgaon district in Maharashtr­a, switched to organic farming seven years ago after experienci­ng diminishin­g yields from his 8-hectare (20-acre) plot. He came across a book on organic farming techniques using ancient Vedic science.

Additional Informatio­n from Poverty Matters Blog with support from Bill and Belinda Gates Foundation

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