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World farmers urged to join "Greener" revolution
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09:23, July 25, 2008

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Some 100 delegates from 36 countries meeting at Rome's UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) called on farmers on Thursday to join the ongoing "Greener" revolution represented by a form of farming known as Conservation Agriculture (CA).

This farming system, CA for short, aims to help feed the world more sustainably by building up soil ecosystems and reducing unnecessary soil disturbance wherever possible.

According to one study, some 20 percent of the earth's cropland is now being eroded or otherwise degraded a potential catastrophe given the need to double world food production by 2050to feed a population of more than nine billion.

Rebuilding good soil structure and encouraging biological processes in soil increases its capacity to produce crops, the delegates declared in a Framework for Action adopted at the end of a three-day technical meeting on Investing in Sustainable Crop Intensification and Improving Soil Health.

They urged "a rapid shift, whenever and wherever conditions permit it, to management systems based on minimal soil disturbance, increased soil cover, and appropriate crop rotation."

The Framework for Action also called on donors and policy-makers to promote such systems into their programs for agricultural development and to mitigate the current food crisis.

Introduced some 30 years ago, Conservation Agriculture, is currently practiced on 100 million hectares of land across the world. Soil is disturbed as little as possible and is seeded directly through existing mulch cover. CA was shown at the meeting to produce returns and benefits in a variety of situations including large commercial farms in South America, smallholder plots in Africa and high production systems in temperate Asia.

CA, while not a panacea for all existing problems, was nonetheless a necessary element for sustainable land management in many agricultural systems and regions, the meeting agreed. Ways of introducing CA also have to be improved for regions with difficult conditions such as arid lands, which requires specific investments.

Earlier this month, the UN Comprehensive Framework for Action on the Global Food Crisis noted that "Conservation Agriculture practices contribute to increase soils' water retention and plant nutrient exchange capacity, both of which are imperatives for soil health and sustainable production."

"It won't be easy to quickly change habits in order to farm land both intensively and sustainably," FAO Senior Agricultural Officer Theodor Friedrich said. "But failure to do so could imperil the world's future capacity to feed its people."

The meeting, which brought together representatives of governments and international organizations together with researchers, donors, the private sector, farmers and NGOs, was organized jointly by FAO, Britain's Tropical Agriculture Association, the Forum for Agricultural Research in Africa, the Global Forum for Agricultural Research , the World Agroforestry Center and other stakeholder organizations.

Source:Xinhua



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