You may login with either your assigned username or your e-mail address.
The password field is case sensitive.

Downloads - Agriculture

National action plan on climate change (NAPCC) and supporting mission documents (2008-11)

The National Action Plan on Climate Change (NAPCC) is a policy document prepared by the Prime Minister's Council on Climate Change. It gives the direction which India needs to take, to mitigate and adapt to climate change. It has been prepared keeping in mind that India's economic need to tap its natural resources needs to be tempered with the need to maintain ecological balance.

Read More

Taral darpane samajer mukh – Bengali translation of the book on Kosi floods by Anupam Mishra

Kosi FloodsThis is the Bengali translation of Anupam Mishra’s book “Tairne wala samaj doob raha hai” written in the context of the floods in the Kosi river in Bihar in 2004. The second edition of the book came out in 2008 just after the devastating Bihar floods in the year when the river thundered down from the Himalayas on its way to the sea sweeping half of Bihar.

The book analyzes the behavior of rivers in northern Bihar, their impact on society, floods and their management. It argues against technical choices, as not feasible and stresses on living with rivers without building embankments. Joya Mitra, the translator notes in the preface that there is a need to live with floods, a message which comes across sharply in the book.

The Kosi river lived up to its reference as Bihar's 'river of sorrow' in the year 2008 by going back to a course it once followed many years ago and in the process inundated croplands and rendered nearly three million people homeless. The book refers to the desolate waterscape of flood-devastated Bihar and examines the causes behind the same.

The river's unstable nature has been attributed to the heavy silt it carries during the monsoon season. This meandering river is 20,000 years old and its seven currents cannot be tamed. The flood plains are elevated at the north along the Himalayas and slightly lifted in the east owing to silt deposition in flood plains. The river is prone to channel migration and it is believed that in the past 200 years, the river has shifted about 120 km because its original flow is eastward, before it merges with the Ganges. 

According to the author, floods are never sudden and yet on its arrival we consider it as unexpected. A closer analysis of the present flood and flood-related events suggests that floods can be anticipated with reasonable accuracy yet people fail as regards preparedness thereby magnifying its destructive impact.

The book argues against engineering solutions in particular the attempts in the last two hundred years to jacket the river withKosi Floods embankments and barrages and notes that this may lead to more devastation. The devastating floods river Kosi wreaked upon millions of people has ignited public debate on the necessity of embankment as they do not work because the river carries high amounts of silt. Usually these are designed without a proper understanding of the morphology of the river.

Enclosing the silt-laden river within an embankment that will force it to run in east-west course against the region's topography is a recipe for future disaster. More so because the river arises in the fragile Central Himalayas, the Siwaliks whose conditions cannot be compared with either the North Eastern or the Western Himalayas. Kosi emerges from the young mountains whose activities are unpredictable and is prone to having silt and rocks being carried off with the water. The book traces how embankments that were meant to mitigate floods have been reduced to structures over which people can take refuge during floods.

The author suggests that for relief works the government should have instead of spending over twenty four crore rupees on helicopters and fuel for dropping food packets, which anyway turns out to be inadequate for flood relief, used over twenty thousand boats owned by the locals prior to and during the floods. This way flood management would have proven to be more efficient and cost effective.

Also, the locals are familiar with the meandering waters, big or small, and with their collaboration, the impact of floods can be less destructive. People in this part of the country knew to live with floods. They did not try to hold the rivers in check but wove around them a life of boats, fisheries and appropriate crops. Reductionist assumptions and skewed development programs adopted by the Government have done enormous damage. There is a need for the authorities dealing with floods to understand flood management techniques adopted by local people in the past and adapt them for use in present days.

The Kosi basin had numerous natural and man-made depressions, which ran for 5 to 10 kilometers which become lakes during monsoons. These can be used as water holes during dry weathers. The state has in a rush to tap the agricultural potential of theKosi Floods soil, filled these depressions and converted them into cultivable lands. Now with no depressions left, the waters run helter-skelter wreaking havoc on the lives of people that worship it. Ironically all that agriculture is of no use any more.

In the final section of the book “Discourses on development and the use of language” the author deals with larger systemic issues. An analogy is drawn between us and brinjal fry lying on a plate that tends to roll with the movement of the plate. The tendency of common people to get influenced by dominant discourses be they of nationalization or liberalisation without any reflection and questioning is discussed here. The book ends with the message that it is high time to think about these issues.

Download the Bengali translation of the book below -

Image courtesy: drdivas.wordpress.com, flickrhivemind.net, srikanta.co.cc/blog/?p=338

Read More

History of irrigation in Bihar – Ancient, British and upto Pre-plan Period – A report by the Water and Land Management Institute, Patna

This report by the Water and Land Management Institute, Patna traces the history of irrigation in Bihar through the ancient, British and Pre-plan period. Irrigation is being practiced there since ancient times dating back to Kautilya, who lived in Patliputra (now Patna), which was the capital of the mighty Mauryan empire (400 BC). Kautilya had laid down the principles on rainfall and irrigation in his famous book Kautilya Arthasashtra.

Read More

Irrigation system operation practices - A handbook by Central Water Commission (1990)

This handbook on “Irrigation System Operation Practices” by the Central Water Commission has been developed to build in a scientific approach as well as homogeneity in renewing the irrigation practices in the country. For increasing agricultural productivity from existing irrigation systems, improved operation of the systems coupled with timely maintenance of the systems has a major role to play.

Read More

Pest and disease management in organic, natural, sustainable agriculture - Presentations from the South Asia Conference on "Outstanding Organic Agriculture Techniques", Bangalore organised by OFAI (2009)

PestThis set of presentations from the conference on Outstanding Organic Agriculture Techniques held during September 2009 at Bangalore deals with pest and disease management practices in organic farming, which rely primarily on preventive and integrated methods.

Crop production and plan protection in organic farming

This paper by S R Sundararaman presents organic farming as the only recourse for farmers, to save both livelihood and the health of the soil. Organic farming methods enable farmers save money and turn their farmyard waste into value-added products for increasing crop production. Farmers will not have to be dependent on agri-business companies for seeds, fertilizers and pesticides. Our self-reliance is thus preserved. A large portion of our country's foreign exchange is used to pay for the import of petroleum products. By going organic we will also help our country save on valuable foreign exchange. Our land will keep giving us returns for extended periods of time unlike farming as per the green revolution, where the land stays productive for a short time and then becomes sterile.

The uppermost question in the minds of farmers who have recently converted to organic farming or who want to turn organic is how to ensure that crop production does not reduce and how to protect the plants from disease, without the chemical fertilizers and pesticides that their fields have grown used to. This paper provides the answers and it also seeks to reassure all farmers that there is no farm which cannot turn around and produce quality crops in sufficient quantity, using organic farming methods.

Read More

Conserving seeds (production, collection, storage) in organic, natural, sustainable agriculture - Presentations from the South Asia Conference on "Outstanding Organic Agriculture Techniques", Bangalore organised by OFAI (2009)

Conserving SeedsThis set of presentations from the conference on Outstanding Organic Agriculture Techniques held during September 2009 at Bangalore deals with the conservation of seeds particularly for small subsistence farmers who are not very linked to local markets and for whom seed production is still an integral part of farming activity seamlessly merged with the growing of crops and the totality of work and life on a farm.

Read More

Promoting plant health and a living soil in organic, natural, sustainable agriculture - Presentations from the South Asia Conference on "Outstanding Organic Agriculture Techniques", Bangalore organised by OFAI (2009)

SprayingThis set of presentations from the conference on Outstanding Organic Agriculture Techniques held during September 2009 at Bangalore deals with methods for promoting plant health through organic farming.

Healthy fields: Managing plant health

This presentation by S R Sundaraman of Tamil Nadu Farmers Technology Association, Erode on managing plant health begins with an account of the techniques that can be employed in TNRH 29 rice through organic SRI methods. The following are recommended in harvesting stage – (a) four irrigations with fruit gaudi (b) two applications of MEM (c) application of four sprays and (d) four applications of parasites. The growth promoters used are Archea solution, Concentrated Amudham Sol, Panchakavya, Butter Milk Sol, Fish/Egg Extract, Leaf Extract Solution-pest control and TFPE-MN Supplements. Apart from rice, the other crops dealt with are maize, kadali banana, turmeric, sugarcane and vegetables.

Read More

Introduction to organic, natural, sustainable agriculture - Presentations from the South Asia Conference on "Outstanding Organic Agriculture Techniques", Bangalore organised by OFAI (2009)

Paddy SeedlingsThis set of presentations from the conference on Outstanding Organic Agriculture Techniques held during September 2009 at Bangalore provides an introduction to organic farming, and bringing together various issues related to organic farming.

Organic farming can feed the world

This presentation by Claude Alvares, deals with the work of India’s organic farming community and the Organic Farming Association of India (OFAI). It states that the best organic farmers look to the forest for their learning. It details out how one raises plants (or trees) without – (a) NPK (b) Dams and canal irrigation (c) Tractors (d) Pesticides, weedicides, fungicides, homicides (e) Bank credit or bank extension officers (f) Agricultural scientists or universities (g) Negative environmental effects like climate change and (h) Water pollution.

Read More

Introduction to Integrated Water Resource Management (IWRM) - Open courseware from the United Nations University (UNU)

Introduction to IWRM (UNU)This introductory course on Integrated Water Resource Management (IWRM), from the United Nations University (UNU), provides a brief historical background and overview of IWRM and gives an overview of the various aspects of IWRM, from integration, capacity building to applications and case studies.

IWRM has been defined by the Global Water Partnership (2000) as a process, which promotes the coordinated development and management of water, land and related resources in order to maximize the resultant economic and social welfare in an equitable manner without compromising the sustainability of vital ecosystems. An important aspect of any IWRM program is therefore, research, planning and action at the river basin level. Read More

Mitigating climate change through organic agriculture - Keynote address at the Third Organic Farming Association of India Convention, held at Anand, Gujarat (2010)

Green Revolution (GR) technologies, supported by official policies, and fuelled by agro-chemicals, machinery and irrigation, are well known to have improved agricultural production and productivity Read More

Arghyam

6.22-2011.07.01-06