THIRD WORLD NETWORK INFORMATION SERVICE ON SUSTAINABLE  AGRICULTURE
 
Dear friends and  colleagues,  
Re: The economics of  agriculture under natural farming
In the article below, an Indian  organic farmer recounts how his bitter experience with expensive and  impoverishing Green Revolution techniques led him on the road to natural,  organic farming. Natural farming has allowed him to reduce his costs, yet  enhance production and become self-reliant.
The article was published in  Third World Resurgence No. 230 (October 2009).
 
With best  wishes,
 
Lim Li  Ching
Third World  Network
131 Jalan  Macalister,
10400  Penang,
Malaysia
Email:  twnet@po.jaring.my
Websites: www.twnside.org.sg, www.biosafety-info.net
The economics of  agriculture under natural farming
An Indian organic  farmer recounts how his bitter experience with expensive and impoverishing Green  Revolution techniques led him on the road to natural, organic  farming.
Subhash  Sharma
SOIL, water and seeds are in  fact the strength of farmers. I could understand this agro-economics only when I  connected myself with this ground reality. 
I have been in the farming  profession since 1975 and during these years I have seen two faces of science in  agriculture.
Destructive face of  science
I started farming like others,  applying plenty of chemical fertilisers and poisons and using hybrid seeds.  During the initial years, there were indeed bumper crops but that could not be  sustained for any length of time. Production from my farm started declining and  the cost of cultivation started rising. Such a situation continued till 1994.  This was the year when I adopted natural farming. Nature became my guru and  started revealing the causes of reduced production on my farm during the  previous nine years (1986-1994). 
In the process of farming with  chemicals I had destroyed almost the entire micro-organism population in the  soil, trees, birds, seeds, water, soil and personal energy and that was what  caused the reduction in the yields. Nobody should ignore or underestimate the  importance of the aforesaid factors in farming.  What unfolded on  my farm was also happening with all the farmers like me in India. In the pursuit  of increased production, the science of agriculture based on chemicals was  adopted but it resulted in continuous lowering of production and damaged  agro-economics. I question now: how can this science help the country achieve a  higher rate of growth?
The greater consequence was the  destruction of the agricultural environment. Increased mechanisation, which made  human labour redundant, led to large-scale migration of rural people towards  urban areas. The kind of urban living turned out to be worse than hell and gave  rise to enhanced urban crime. Those who could not migrate turned into Naxalites  and terrorists. Tackling them now is costing enormous amounts of public money.  This is what happened to our human resource.
The loss of soils and water is  another severe problem because that will lead to managing food grains and water  from outside. This in turn will weaken us (India). One needs to remember that  money is not the answer to all problems. 
We have already lost our seeds  and are being forced to depend now on genetically modified (GM) seeds which are  harmful to human health as well as the environment. Such seeds are to be  considered as ‘terminator’ seeds as they hardly germinate during the following  season. Wherever farmers have adopted GM seeds the soils have deteriorated and  many new diseases have started affecting the crops. Also, the rising atmospheric  temperature has had its own damaging effect on production patterns. In the year  2008-09 my farm production declined by 25% but my profit doubled because of  market forces (less availability led to increased prices).  But  this is not a good sign. 
We certainly do not want an  economic situation that results in farm produce going beyond the purchasing  capacity of people.  That is why change in agriculture is  essential. 
We need to change in order to  protect and preserve our soils, water, seeds, environment and labour-power and  to strengthen our economics. This is only possible if we can reduce our costs  and yet enhance production.
Constructive  science
When I first started natural  farming, I did not really know much about it. But slowly nature became my  teacher and taught me the science and economics of agriculture. I came to  understand that this is the only constructive science under which all the  constituents of nature are conserved and at the same time show gradual growth.  In chemical-intensive agriculture the growth was the result of killing all  others – a violent tendency – but this constructive science ended my violent  growth and made me totally non-violent. In this non-violent regime I could  visualise a strong economics which is in the interest of farmers as well as the  entire human race. This reminded me of Mahatma Gandhi whose ideas could give  pleasure only when brought into practice. Times will change but this theory of  agriculture will remain intact.  
This constructive science also  made me fully self-reliant. This self-reliance made me strong by returning to me  my power of the soil, water, seeds, environment and labour. Nature made me  strong by giving me five avenues of success: 1) self-reliance of soils; 2)  self-reliance in water; 3) self-reliance in seeds; 4) cropping cycle, and 5)  understanding of labour.
Self-reliance of  soils
This has strengthened my  agro-economics. With my strong economy I have realised the potential strength of  the agricultural economy of the entire nation. This self-reliance taught me love  and now I do not need any kind of insecticide or chemical fertiliser input to my  soil. Both these are managed by nature itself. The four constituents of nature  which help this process are: a) the cow; b) trees; c) birds and d)  vegetation.
a) The  cow
In the year 1994, based on personal observation I  developed a process of utilising fresh cow-dung, cow-urine, and jaggery (a local  sugar). In Indian villages, fresh cow-dung diluted with water is traditionally  sprayed on the open space about our houses (except in the rainy season). As the  rains come the earthworms start coming out in plenty. This gave me the idea that  if fresh cow-dung is sprayed in the fields, the number of earthworms will  increase and thereby other micro-organisms as well. If we use cow-urine along  with dung, the fungus of the soil can be controlled. 
Following this, I placed one  200-litre drum for each acre, filled it with 60 kg of fresh cow-dung, 5 litres  of cow-urine and 250 grams jaggery, and used this mixture (diluted with water)  extensively on the fields. I named it Go-Sanjeevak, the application of which  gave me better yields in the very first year itself. In four years the  micro-organism population increased. In each square foot, 6 to 10 earthworms  could be found. The increase in bacteria and earthworms demanded more feed,  which was met by constituent no. 4, i.e., vegetation.  The  increases in earthworm and bacterial numbers resulted in less input cost along  with better yields. This helped me to develop a new agricultural economics.  
b)  Trees
In the years 1990-92 I had realised that the  temperature increase because of industrial pollution would certainly kill  millions of plant species and living organisms within the next 40-45 years. For  me, a farmer, this was a serious warning. To check the rise in temperature, I  decided to plant trees. In one hectare I planted 2,000 wild trees to create a  forest around me and in the remaining 11 hectares I planted bird-loving trees.  These 150 trees included  jamun, goolar,  aam (mango),  peepal, bargad, neem, imli, arjun, etc., and I brought them up as children. As  these trees grew, my farm output increased and I could understand how the trees  helped in agricultural production. 
The trees control the rise in temperature. This is a  great help for the growth of bacteria and friendly insects. The big tree-leaves  which fall on the earth are converted into manure. As the trees increase, birds  multiply and a new economics of agriculture is revealed.
c)  Birds                  
The growth of trees within the farm increased the  micro-organism population and the supply of good manure. Birds started  multiplying. On observation I found each bird eats at least 50 destructive  insects and contributes its excreta to the soil as manure. Where there is good  vegetation this process goes on the whole year round.  Within 8-10  years the number of birds increased to  the thousands. You can  imagine how many insects are being managed every day and how much manure is  added to the soil. This also helped me to write a new economics of  agriculture.
d) Vegetation    
In 1994 I started using crop residues and the grasses  of the farm back on the farm itself. Each hectare of my farm started getting  around 25 metric tons of this wet biomass. This enhanced the micro-organism  population within our farm, which in turn converted this biomass into manure and  simultaneously controlled the fungus on the soils. Growth of microorganisms,  earthworms, etc., made our soil porous, which helped plant roots to get oxygen  and rain water. Millions of such micro-organisms in their lifetime help the  soils and after their demise, they become top-quality natural manure.  
In this way these constituents  of soil self-reliance provided me with free manure, insect control and water,  making my farming less costly and more productive. A new agro-economics was thus  revealed.
A study of the large number of  living organisms and creatures doing the work of soil self-reliance gave me the  understanding that every living being on the earth plays an important role in  the well-being of the human race. Soil self-reliance will solve problems related  to temperature rise and scarcity of water. 
Self-reliance in  water
India has been blessed by  nature with abundant water but a crisis is now developing. The change in  agriculture technology in the 1960s resulted in immense use of water in farming  along with chemical fertilisers as well as poisonous compounds. These destroyed  and killed large numbers of insects and small creatures which used to make the  soil porous and capable of absorbing water and thus recharging the groundwater  table. Chemical-based farming caused rapid lowering of groundwater levels while  the rainwater on the surface was allowed to flow through drains and  rivers.  Along with the rapid flow of rain water, useful soil also  started getting washed away, affecting soil productivity enormously. The   washed-off soil silts dams and irrigation  reservoirs   and  gives  rise to  more   and  more  water  shortages  and crises.
A large number of irrigation  projects were built for developing agriculture but the growing urban population  and industries forced the diversion of this enormous quantity of water away from  farmers and agriculture. Water, on the other hand, is also being polluted by  chemical-intensive agriculture as well as by the discharge of poisonous  effluents from industries. Management of such harmful and unhealthy water is no  easy task. 
Planning should, in fact, have  been done with a view to providing good potable and purified water to all  citizens, helpful for healthy farming as well as human  health.
Instead, as production of  hydro-electricity increased, more and more groundwater was exploited for  irrigation as well as for drinking purposes. The result was that in several  states groundwater has declined to dangerous levels, thereby affecting ground  temperatures as well. This situation is alarming because it directly affects  crop productivity as well as human health. 
Thus the destructive science  promoted after 1960 polluted water and exacerbated the water crisis in a big  way. 
Ray of  hope
I  am sure if we change our  agricultural policies even now we can get rid of the water crisis for ever. This  I say because of my personal experience of adopting natural farming in place of  the destructive science earlier pursued, which has provided a ray of hope and a  path of comprehensive development in addition to solving the water  problem.
Since I turned to natural  farming, I have realised the importance of water. Now when I hold 100% water  which falls on my farm and divert it underground, the soil is automatically  saved from erosion. This tends to enhance productivity of the soil. Thus when I  was able to hold 100% water on my farm, I realised that I had achieved  self-reliance in water. In order to verify this I undertook a scientific study  of my 12 hectares in the year 2003-04. This was as  follows:
1. When one hectare of farm  receives 1 cm rain, the total precipitation is 100,000  litres.
2. If rainfall during a particular year in that area is  100 cm, the total precipitation per hectare is 10,000,000  litres.
3.  Thus a 12-hectare farm, like mine,  receives a total of 120,000,000 litres of rain water.
4.  On average 30% water evaporates from  the surface, which means nearly 36,000,000 litres of water is  evaporated.
5. The remaining 84,000,000 litres of water are  diverted below ground, i.e., groundwater is recharged.
6. If we draw more water than this for irrigation, this  means we are not self-reliant in water.
On my farm I have two  bore-wells, each fitted with a 5-hp pump which draws about 36,000 litres of  water per hour. Normally my pumps run for 800 hours per year. That means each  motor draws 28,800,000 litres of water per annum. The two motors thus draw out  57,600,000 litres of water. Since I have recharged 84,000,000 litres of water in  that year I have a net gain of 26,400,000 litres of water. This shows that I am  fully self-reliant in water resource. In spite of drawing groundwater I am  contributing 26,400,000 litres to the groundwater reserve.
In addition to the above, water  was conserved by appropriate methods of cultivation following  the  contour system, sowing across the slope, natural absorption because of porosity  of the soil, and digging 20ft x 10ft pits/ditches in each hectare to store rain  or excess  water. With this water I harvest 450 tons of vegetables  and food grains while during the years 1975-86 the maximum production that I got  was only 400 tons. My production from 1986 onwards started coming down and  during 1990-94 it turned out to be only 50 tons.  The cost of  production continued increasing in those days till I was forced to abandon that  system.
I adopted natural farming  methods in 1994. Slowly, after realising the importance of Go-Sanjeevak, trees,  birds, biomass and water and properly utilising them in my production, I was  once again able to push the output upwards from 50 tons to 450 tons by the year  2000. 
A new record was again set.  
Output  increases
My farming experience clearly  belies scientists’ claims that chemical fertilisers, poisons and hybrid seeds  are the main factors behind higher production.   
The increase in production seen  from the introduction of chemical farming was essentially because of enhanced  availability of water and energy. Prior to 1960 we lacked water as well as  energy (electric power), natural farming was not properly developed while the  increase in population continued. After 1960 water resources were created and  availability of energy too went up. From 1975 onwards chemical-intensive farming  was taken up on a large scale. In the beginning that showed higher production  but by 2002 the production stabilised and thereafter started declining. In spite  of our enhanced water capacity due to dams like Sardar Sarovar, the production  kept on dwindling. Why that was happening was clear to me because of nature’s  teachings. 
During the years 1986-94 why  did my production come down? Cotton output was reduced from 30 quintals to 10  quintals, jowar from 50 quintals to 15 quintals, tomatoes from 350 quintals to  hardly 5 quintals (because of mosaic infestation). As a result, my production  declined from 400 to 50 tons. Despite available power, the same water quantity,  and increased use of chemical fertilisers as well as pesticides, the production  came down to 50 tons. The cost of running the farm was increasing but gains were  dwindling.  In 1994, the first year I turned to natural farming, I  received 50 tons only but achieved savings in terms of much lower costs. By  2001, my farm production increased to 450 tons of vegetables as well as food  grains. For this higher production, I am using the same power and water as  before. Only the chemicals have been ousted. 
Once farmers understand the  techniques of natural farming, their agro-economics will become strong. Villages  will have abundant water, the groundwater level will increase and the nation  will become rich in water resources.
Thus I must say that  agriculture demands major changes today. The new agro-economics based on natural  agriculture can only benefit the farmers, society and the nation.   
Subhash Sharma is an  organic farmer whose farm is located at Yeovatmal in Maharashtra state on the  west coast of India. He regularly addresses training colleges all over the  country on organic farming.