Greenpeace lauds Bihar's organic farming initiatives

IANS  |  Patna 

Greenpeace India, the environment protection organisation, has welcomed and lauded the government's decision to give priority to organic farming.

"This initiative will prove sustainable for the agriculture and food security in the long run," a Greenpeace official said here on Monday.

According to the organisation, Chief Minister Nitish Kumar has directed the state's Agriculture Department officials to give priority to organic farming, and said it should be the basis of agicultural roadmap.

"Organic farming is the only way for the farmers to ensure better profit and to protect and conserve biodiversity. has good schemes for organic farming, it should be implemented on a large scale with the help of the farmers," Greenpeace senior campaigner Ishteyaque Ahmad said.

Ahmad said Greenpeace expects the to give at least 40 per cent of the budget of the agricultural roadmap of 2017-22 to organic farming.

"It will encourage the farmers to say no to chemical fertilisers. Farmers would certainly shift from chemical-based farming to almost completely organic," he said.

--IANS

ik/pgh/vt

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

Greenpeace lauds Bihar's organic farming initiatives

Greenpeace India, the environment protection organisation, has welcomed and lauded the Bihar government's decision to give priority to organic farming.

Greenpeace India, the environment protection organisation, has welcomed and lauded the government's decision to give priority to organic farming.

"This initiative will prove sustainable for the agriculture and food security in the long run," a Greenpeace official said here on Monday.

According to the organisation, Chief Minister Nitish Kumar has directed the state's Agriculture Department officials to give priority to organic farming, and said it should be the basis of agicultural roadmap.

"Organic farming is the only way for the farmers to ensure better profit and to protect and conserve biodiversity. has good schemes for organic farming, it should be implemented on a large scale with the help of the farmers," Greenpeace senior campaigner Ishteyaque Ahmad said.

Ahmad said Greenpeace expects the to give at least 40 per cent of the budget of the agricultural roadmap of 2017-22 to organic farming.

"It will encourage the farmers to say no to chemical fertilisers. Farmers would certainly shift from chemical-based farming to almost completely organic," he said.

--IANS

ik/pgh/vt

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

image
Business Standard
177 22