Promoting a Sustainable Agriculture and Food Sector: India
Date
2024-07Author
United Nations Environment Programme
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RT Generic T1 Promoting a Sustainable Agriculture and Food Sector: India A1 United Nations Environment Programme YR 2024-07 LK https://wedocs.unep.org/20.500.11822/45991 PB AB TY - GEN T1 - Promoting a Sustainable Agriculture and Food Sector: India AU - United Nations Environment Programme Y1 - 2024-07 UR - https://wedocs.unep.org/20.500.11822/45991 PB - AB - @misc{20.500.11822_45991 author = {United Nations Environment Programme}, title = {Promoting a Sustainable Agriculture and Food Sector: India}, year = {2024-07}, abstract = {}, url = {https://wedocs.unep.org/20.500.11822/45991} } @misc{20.500.11822_45991 author = {United Nations Environment Programme}, title = {Promoting a Sustainable Agriculture and Food Sector: India}, year = {2024-07}, abstract = {}, url = {https://wedocs.unep.org/20.500.11822/45991} } TY - GEN T1 - Promoting a Sustainable Agriculture and Food Sector: India AU - United Nations Environment Programme UR - https://wedocs.unep.org/20.500.11822/45991 PB - AB -View/Open
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As India looks towards 2030 and
beyond, its food system confronts
a myriad of challenges, including
heightened pressure on natural
resources, the impact of climate
change, land fragmentation,
increasing urbanization, high rates
of malnutrition among children
and impacts of chemical inputs on
human health (Gulati et al. 2023).
Major concerns around natural
resources include the decline in
yields, soil fertility, soil organic carbon
(SOC), and water scarcity. 86 per cent
of the farmers in India are small and
marginal – 126 million farmers with
an average holding of 0.6 hectares
(India, Ministry of Agriculture and
Farmer’s Welfare 2019) – posing
challenges for access to improved
technologies, extension services,
credit, and markets that would enable them to mitigate and adapt to these
challenges. Women are particularly
affected by these challenges given
that the agriculture sector has the
highest share of women workers
(62.9%) of all industries in India (India,
Ministry of Labour and Employment
2023).
Many of these concerns in the
agriculture sector, as is the case
globally, have arisen from a
tendency to measure the success of
agricultural and food policies through
a narrow lens such as ‘yield per
hectare’ or ‘per capita production’ that
fails to consider agriculture and food
systems in a holistic manner, ignoring
the links between food systems, the
environment and human wellbeing.
If not amended, these can have
long-term deleterious effects on not
just food supply but also on human
health and nature.
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