National Mission on Natural Farming (NMNF) was launched recently with an outlay of Rs 2,481 crore by subsuming all previous schemes to promote natural faming.
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Natural Farming |
Organic Farming |
Concept |
Advocates minimal human intervention, relying on natural processes to grow crops. Inspired by the concept of "do-nothing farming" by Masanobu Fukuoka. |
Uses organic inputs like compost, manure and bio-fertilizers but still involves planned human intervention for pest control and soil management. |
Use of Fertilizers |
Avoids all fertilizers including organic ones. Uses natural resources like Jeevamrutha (fermented microbial culture) and mulch to enhance soil fertility. |
Permits the use of organic fertilizers such as vermicomposting and green manure, but disallows chemical fertilizers. |
Pesticides |
Focuses on creating an ecosystem where natural predators manage pests and may use simple natural mixtures like neem oil. |
Organic fields have higher levels of pests than conventional fields which needs the use of organic pesticides and bio-pesticides for pest control. |
Soil Health
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Relies on soil microbes and organic matter to naturally replenish the soil without disturbing the soil structure. |
Enriches the soil through organic amendments like compost, often requiring tillage. |
Cost |
Low-cost, as it avoids external inputs like compost and relies on farm-derived materials. |
Relatively expensive due to the need for purchased organic inputs, machinery, maintenance and certification. |
Crop Yield |
Yields may be lower initially, but proponents argue they stabilize and become sustainable over time. |
Yields are generally better than natural farming but still lower than conventional farming. |
Sustainability |
Focused on preserving biodiversity and natural ecosystems for long-term benefits. |
Sustainable, but may not fully eliminate environmental impact due to tillage and resource use. |
Water Usage |
Promotes practices like mulching and cover cropping to retain soil moisture, reducing the need for irrigation. |
May require more irrigation as organic fertilizers and tillage can increase water demand. |
Biodiversity |
Focuses on enhancing biodiversity by encouraging the growth of multiple crops, weeds, and beneficial organisms in the same field. |
Promotes biodiversity to limited extent as it involves monocropping with crop rotation. |
Economic |
Emphasizes self-reliance and reducing farmer dependency on markets and external agencies |
Involves creating a premium market for organic produce, which can benefit farmers financially if properly marketed. |
Sikkim is now the world’s first 100% organic state and it won the prestigious Future Policy Gold Award from the UN Food and Agriculture (FAO), after beating 51 nominations from around the world.
Why India is promoting natural farming over organic farming?
What lies ahead?
Reference