Invest in ecological farming, demands Greenpeace

August 24, 2009 04:59 pm | Updated December 17, 2016 03:29 am IST

Photo: V.Raju

Photo: V.Raju

After years of indiscriminate use, synthetic fertilisers are currently hampering the increase of food production in the country.

Intensive agriculture, with high use of synthetic fertilisers and chemical pesticides, was introduced in India in the 1960s as part of the Green Revolution. As a result, synthetic fertilisers’ consumption increased from a mere 0.07 million tonnes (Mt) in 1950-51 to a staggering 22 Mt in the year 2006-07. This contributed to the growth of food production in the country, but nearly five decades down the line, indiscriminate use of these synthetics has degraded the natural resource base, especially the soil. As a consequence, food production is no longer increasing and is now affected by diminishing returns and falling dividends in agriculture intensive areas.

Synthetic fertiliser consumption in India is highly variable among regions, but in 78 districts fertiliser consumption is twice the national average.

The synthetic fertiliser usage in the country shows significant variation from region to region. However, in the most agriculture intensive districts (78 districts out of 528 major districts in India), synthetic N-P-K (nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium) fertiliser consumption is more than 200 kg/ha, a rate that is twice the country average. Six crops (rice, wheat, cotton, sugar cane, rapeseed and mustard) consume about two-thirds of the synthetic fertiliser applied. The irrigated area, accounting for 40 per cent of the total agricultural area, receives 60 per cent of the total fertiliser applied.

The huge Central Government fertiliser subsidy is one of the main reasons behind imbalance and overuse of synthetic nitrogen fertilisers in India.

Synthetic fertilisers are released into the agrarian system at highly subsidised rates. The amount of subsidy outgo on synthetic N-P-K fertilisers (domestic and imported) in India during the last three decades has grown exponentially from a mere Rs. 60 crore during 1976-77 to an astronomical Rs. 40,338 crore during 2007-08. According to government sources (Ministry of Chemicals and Fertiliser, 2008) the subsidy estimate for 2008-09 was Rs.1,19,772 crores.

At present, the subsidy structure is skewed towards synthetic nitrogen fertilisers and this has been phenomenal in promoting its overuse. Urea accounts for 82 per cent of the total consumption of nitrogen fertilisers in the country. Several field surveys conducted by the Principal Investigators in different parts of the country point to the fact that the huge fertiliser subsidy is one of the main reasons behind imbalance and overuse of synthetic nitrogen fertilisers in India. A majority of the surveyed farmers reported that they used higher doses of nitrogen to replace other nutrients, since as a result of government subsidies, synthetic nitrogen is relatively cheaper to procure. Farmers also expressed their willingness to use more ecological fertilisers if they were easily available and subsidised.

Overuse of synthetic nitrogen fertilisers, catalysed by skewed subsidy policies, is causing long-term damage to soil health locally and to the environment at a larger scale (e.g. climate gases and dead zones in the oceans). Soil degradation problems such as soil acidification and alkalisation, as well as deterioration of the soil’s physical properties, such as infiltration, soil aeration, soil structure and bulk density, have all been linked to over emphasis on synthetic fertilizers and neglect of organic fertilization. Several long-term fertiliser trial experiments by the Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR) indicate that the continuous use of synthetic nitrogen alone has resulted in declining yield and has deleterious effects on long-term soil fertility and the sustainability of agricultural systems.

More subsidies, poor soil health and less food

Introspection on results from the multiple long-term fertiliser trials in rice-wheat systems have revealed gradual deterioration of soil health and thus long-term productivity due to overuse and imbalance use of synthetic fertilisers. In Punjab, the state with highest use of synthetic fertilisers in India, data on the relationship between food grain production and fertiliser consumption from 1960 to 2003 show that in spite of consistent increment in N-P-K fertiliser consumption, grain yield has not only practically stagnated but also showed a declining trend with fertiliser application during the later period, 1992 to 2003. Soil degradation, mainly the decline in soil organic matter both in quality and quantity, is one of the major reasons linked to stagnation and decline in yields in most intensive agriculture areas in India.

The response of additional fertiliser application to food grain production has shown a distinct declining trend in recent years: the increased use of synthetic fertilisers no longer contributes to higher soil productivity. The average crop response to fertiliser use was around 25 kg of grain per kg of fertiliser during 1960s, the said value has reduced drastically to 8 kg of grain per kg of fertiliser only during late 1990s. High use of chemical fertilisers is mostly associated with high level of water consumption and micro-nutrient deficiency in soil leading to decline in water table and further deterioration of the soil.

Subsidies: fertilising climate change

Manufacture and use of synthetic nitrogen fertilisers also contributes significantly to emissions of greenhouse gases, and thus climate change. The total emissions from the manufacture and use of synthetic nitrogen fertilisers represent six per cent of India’s total anthropogenic emissions, comparable to sectors like cement or iron and steel industries, and to emissions from the entire road transport system. There is a significant potential to mitigate these emissions. Savings from the efficient use of nitrogen fertilisers and a shift from synthetic to ecological fertilisation could reduce total emissions from fertilisers in India to 36 Mt of CO2-eq from the current 100 Mt of CO2-eq, and the contribution of fertilisers to the country’s emissions would drop from six to two per cent.

Who benefits: farmers, industry or petroleum companies?

Overall, from 1981 to 2008, the average share of the farmers in the synthetic fertiliser subsidy was 64 per cent, while the industry gets about 36 per cent (31 per cent domestic fertiliser industry and five per cent foreign producers/suppliers). However the share of petroleum companies, who supply the massive raw materials essential for fertiliser industry, is yet to be identified. The benefit of fertiliser subsidies also goes very disproportionately in favour of relatively richer irrigated regions than the poorer, mostly rain-fed regions.

The potential for a shift from synthetic to organic nitrogen fertilisers is real: India can save a substantial amount of taxpayers’ money along the way.

Studies in multiple locations have clearly shown that the deleterious effects of synthetic fertilisers on soil health can be improved by adopting ecological methods of farming and by using low-cost organic alternatives. Application of organic manure appears to be the most important option of sustainable nutrient management programmes under the prevailing Indian conditions, where low organic matter content of soils is a major threat to the maintenance of soil health. Organic matter can improve physical, chemical and biological properties of the soil, while synthetic fertilisers cannot perform any of these roles, apart form supplying a few major plant nutrients.

The amount of nitrogen that could be potentially recovered in organic residues is similar to the total amount of synthetic nitrogen applied to Indian soils every year, ~14 Mt. This highlights the potential feasibility of a complete shift from synthetic to organic nitrogen fertilisation. In addition, recent global meta-analysis have also shown that cover crops such as legumes can provide enough nitrogen to substitute the amount of synthetic nitrogen used worldwide while maintaining the same food production.

Vermicompost provides an excellent, profitable alternative for recycling organic residues in the country, and thus a substitute to synthetic nitrogen fertilisers. If India adopts a five-year plan to withdraw the synthetic fertiliser subsidy, it will be possible to save Rs. 12,000 billion as withdrawal of subsidy. Shifting 40 per cent of that savings from subsides (Rs. 4,900 billions only) to investment for vermicomposting units would make possible a shift from synthetic to organic nitrogen fertilisation.

The way forward:

The Government needs to look into an alternate subsidy system that promotes ecological farming and use of organic soil amendments.

The Government needs to shift the irrational subsidy policy for synthetic fertilisers to sustainable ecological practices in agriculture.

Scientific research needs to re-focus on ecological alternatives, to identify agro-ecological practices that ensure future food security under a changing climate. (This is a gist of the executive summary from Greenpeace India)

0 / 0
Sign in to unlock member-only benefits!
  • Access 10 free stories every month
  • Save stories to read later
  • Access to comment on every story
  • Sign-up/manage your newsletter subscriptions with a single click
  • Get notified by email for early access to discounts & offers on our products
Sign in

Comments

Comments have to be in English, and in full sentences. They cannot be abusive or personal. Please abide by our community guidelines for posting your comments.

We have migrated to a new commenting platform. If you are already a registered user of The Hindu and logged in, you may continue to engage with our articles. If you do not have an account please register and login to post comments. Users can access their older comments by logging into their accounts on Vuukle.