Post-Tribune

India’s farmers find ways to restore arid land

- By Sibi Arasu

ANANTAPUR, India — Ramesh Hanumaiya digs a few inches into his field with his hand and examines the soil. There is movement in the thick, brown earth: Tiny earthworms being disturbed from their homestead.

A handful of dirt filled with earthworms might not seem like much, but it’s the result of seven years’ work. “This soil used to be as hard as a brick,” said Ramesh, 37. “It’s now like a sponge. The soil is rich with the nutrients and life that’s needed for my crops to grow on time and in a healthy way.”

Like Ramesh thousands of other farmers in Anantapur, a district in the southern Indian state of Andhra Pradesh, have taken to what’s known as regenerati­ve agricultur­al practices. Techniques like using natural fertilizer­s and planting crops alongside trees and other plants have been successful at combating desertific­ation, the process of once-fertile ground turning into dust. Climate change is exacerbati­ng the loss of arable land as temperatur­es rise and rainfall becomes more irregular.

Described by the United Nations’ desertific­ation agency as one of the greatest threats to human society, it’s estimated that over 40% of the world’s land is already degraded. Nearly 4.7 billion acres of land, more than twice the size of the United States, and roughly 1.5 billion people globally are affected in some way by desertific­ation, according to U.N. estimates.

“It was always a dry region but we knew when it will rain and people used to farm accordingl­y,” said Malla Reddy, who runs a nonprofit that encourages natural farming practices in the region. “Now what’s happening is that the rainfall can happen at any season, farmers are unable to predict this and many a time lose their crops.”

Hotter temperatur­es also mean water is evaporatin­g quicker, leaving less in the ground for thirsty crops.

Reddy’s nonprofit works with over 60,000 farmers across 300,000 acres in the district, supporting individual farmers to restore unproducti­ve land across the entire region.

Most Indian farmers rely on rain-fed agricultur­e, with about 172 million acres — about half of all farmed land in India — dependent on downpours. These lands are also the ones most subject to poor agricultur­al methods, such as excessive use of chemical fertilizer­s, overtillin­g and monocroppi­ng, the practice of planting just a single crop each year, experts say.

Reddy, the director of Accion Fraterna Ecology Center, and the farmers his organizati­on supports use methods known as natural farming and agroforest­ry to avoid spoiling the land. Natural farming replaces chemical fertilizer­s and pesticides with organic matter such as cow dung, cow urine and jaggery, a type of solid dark sugar, to boost soil nutrient levels. Agroforest­ry involves planting woody perennials, trees, shrubs and palms alongside agricultur­al crops.

And while most other farmers in the region either grow groundnuts or rice using chemical fertilizer­s, natural farmers grow a variety of crops. Multicropp­ing ensures that soil nutrients are periodical­ly restored, as opposed to distinct seeding in harvesting seasons, Reddy said.

For other farmers in the area, much of the land is becoming unusable for cultivatio­n because of the extensive use of chemical fertilizer­s, pesticides and weedicides.

“Every week there are many trucks with speakers cruising through our villages, asking farmers to buy this pesticide or that weedicide. Their marketing is incredible and farmers get fooled,” says E.B. Manohar, a 26-year-old natural farmer in the village of Khairevu, also in Anantapur district.

Manohar quit his job as a mechanical engineer in Bangalore, sometimes called “India’s Silicon Valley,” to take up natural farming in his hometown. On his farm he grows tomatoes, chilies and cabbage, among other crops and vegetables.

“I have also started supplying natural fertilizer and weedicide to other farmers in my village,” Manohar said. “Since they have seen that my investment is low and my returns are good, more and more people are getting interested in trying this out.”

But for efforts like Manohar’s and Reddy’s to make a national impact, experts say these initiative­s need to be rolled out on a wider scale.

“Desertific­ation is among the biggest challenges facing India,” said N.H. Ravindrana­th, who helped author several U.N. climate reports and has researched desertific­ation in the country for the last two decades. He said that although the land restoratio­n work in Anantapur is commendabl­e, scaling up is the real challenge.

“We need serious financing for climate adaptation and government policies that encourage restoratio­n. These are the only things that will make this impact on scale,” he added. Money for adapting to harsher weather conditions has long been discussed at U.N. climate conference­s like COP27, as the effects of climate change make it harder for many to sustain their livelihood­s. Some funding for vulnerable nations has been promised but much of it hasn’t been fulfilled.

Around 70% of all land in the world is already converted from its natural state for food production and other purposes and around one-fifth of what’s been converted is already degraded, said Barron Joseph Orr, lead scientist at the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertific­ation.

“We’ve lost productivi­ty in those lands, so we’re undercutti­ng what we’ve converted. So we’ve got a big problem here,” Orr said. “We need to incentiviz­e sustainabl­e land management for small farmers and herders. In our convention­al form of farming, we’re dependent on chemical fertilizer­s, which works, but it basically short-circuits the natural processes in the soil,” which stops it from regenerati­ng, making it unusable in the long run.

Orr added that land restoratio­n can prevent planet-warming gases from escaping degraded ground and going into the atmosphere.

Back in Anantapur, natural farmer Ajantha Reddy, 28, tends to his sweet lime crops. Sweet limes require many years before farmers can see any return on their labor and investment. Reddy is not worried, though.

“The trees have grown in 17 months as much as I would have expected them to grow in four years,” he said. Reddy quit his job as a software engineer in Bangalore during the COVID-19 pandemic and returned to his village in Anantapur to farm.

For Reddy, the satisfacti­on of seeing his crops and his hometown thrive are a big enough incentive to continue natural farming practices.

“I have no intention of going back to Bangalore. When I came home during the pandemic, I thought, ‘why should I go and work for someone else? I have land to cultivate and I could give livelihood to a few people,’” he said. “That thought made up my mind.”

 ?? RAFIQ MAQBOOL/AP ?? A farmer and his helpers prepare natural fertilizer using organic materials Sept. 15 in Hampapuram, in the southern Indian state of Andhra Pradesh. The fertilizer is the only soil supplement the farmer provides to his sweet lime groves.
RAFIQ MAQBOOL/AP A farmer and his helpers prepare natural fertilizer using organic materials Sept. 15 in Hampapuram, in the southern Indian state of Andhra Pradesh. The fertilizer is the only soil supplement the farmer provides to his sweet lime groves.

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