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- Recently, the “Draft Citizen’s Policy for Urban Agriculture in Delhi” was submitted to the Delhi government by Delhi-based research non-profit People’s Resource Centre.
More about the Policy
- Aim:
- The policy aims to provide a holistic framework for urban farming.
- Urban Agriculture in Delhi:
- Some 60 percent of Delhi’s demand for meat is fulfilled by city-grown produce, as is 25 percent of its milk and 15 percent of its vegetable needs.
- Yet policies on land use and farming in the National Capital do not acknowledge the role of cultivation and distribution of food in urban areas, says the draft policy.
- Recommendations:
- It recommends building on existing practices, promoting residential and community farming through rooftop and kitchen gardens, allocating vacant land for agricultural use, creating a market, developing policies for animal rearing and spreading awareness.
Significance
- Food security:
- Issues like rapid urbanisation, population explosion and climate change increases the risk of food shortage.
- These recommendations are crucial to ensure food security for urban communities. This benefit has long been highlighted in arguments for urban farming.
- Fulfilling nutrition demand:
- 2010 report by M S Swaminathan Research Foundation, Chennai, notes that 50 percent of women and children in urban areas are anaemic due to lack of adequate nutrition.
- The study also recommends urban agriculture.
- Poverty alleviation:
- Globally, in 2020, the UN Food and Agriculture Organization acknowledged that urban and periurban farming can contribute to local food and nutritional needs, enable jobs and reduce poverty.
Initiatives in India
- In India, urban farming has seen some traction across states, prompting governments to introduce small-scale initiatives to promote the practice.
- Pune:
- In 2008, Pune’s civic administration launched a city farming project to train and encourage people to take up farming on allocated land.
- Kerala:
- State of Kerala had been food dependent until 2012 after which the state government launched a vegetable development programme to encourage gardening in houses, schools, government and private institutions.
- It also offered subsidy and support for eco-friendly inputs, irrigation, compost and biogas plants.
- According to Kerala State Planning Board, vegetable production rose from 825,000 tonnes in 2011-12 to 1.3 million tonnes in 2014-15.
- Tamil Nadu:
- Similarly, in 2014, the Tamil Nadu government introduced a “do-it-yourself” kit for city dwellers to grow vegetables on rooftops, houses and apartment buildings under its Urban Horticulture Development Scheme.
- Bihar:
- Since 2021, Bihar encourages terrace gardening in five smart cities through subsidy for input cost.
Challenges
- Lack of policy:
- While such initiatives are welcome, their impact cannot be expected to be widespread without a strong policy for urban farming.
- For instance, Pune’s 2008 initiative failed to take off due to poor interest from people and the government.
- Lack of recognition:
- Even the recently released draft Master Plan of Delhi for 2041, does not acknowledge the role of the practice.
- It aims to divide 8,000 hectares of land along the Yamuna into two sub-zones and restrict human activity or settlement in areas directly adjacent to the river.
- However, several communities on the floodplains practise urban farming.
- According to critics, if this draft master plan comes into practice, informal settlements like Chilla Khadar and Bela Estate will lose the agricultural land,
- Even the recently released draft Master Plan of Delhi for 2041, does not acknowledge the role of the practice.
- Lack of parallel benefits:
- Farmers cannot avail benefits under any agricultural schemes such as crop insurance.
- Issue of rapid development:
- Rapid development is also a hindrance in continuing with existing practics.
Suggestions & way ahead
- Practicing innovative techniques like Hydroponics:
- Studies show that excessive use of chemical fertilisers and pesticides in urban farms can lower produce and soil quality.
- However, urban farmers believe such hurdles can be overcome with innovative techniques.
- Hydroponics, a method of soilless farming that uses nutrient solutions to sustain plants, offers a cleaner approach.
- Compared to commercial farming, hydroponics requires 90 per cent lesser water, which can be reused.
- Although such initiatives are still niche and at a nascent stage, one can grow more plants in the space given.
- Small-scale farming – cushion in crisis:
- Kitchen gardening or small-scale community farming cannot sustain the large population, but can act as a cushion to protect urban residents from inflation, vulnerabilities of weather or crises such as COVID-19.
- Even though, such innovations, cannot match the scale of rural agriculture, before more villages become urban, early interventions can result in a sustainable system.
- Recognition & funding:
- There is a need to bring in more institutional clarity and also multi-disciplinary expertise to solve such challenges.
- To promote urban farming, governments must recognise informal practices and link them with agricultural schemes.
Source: DTE
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