Full Coverage: Agriculture
November 2007
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22.11.2007
Paying farmers for environmental services in developing countries can go a long way in mitigating effects of climate change, while also benefiting the billion plus poor who depend on farming for livelihood, claims a recent report by the Food and Agricultural Organization.
more...Related topics/regions: [South Asia] [Land] [Environment] [Climate change] [Environmental activism] [United Nations] Image: More than a billion farmers can benefit from payment programs for environmental services
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19.11.2007
There is nothing official about it. Yet, the ban on grazing imposed by local farmers in some villages of Ahmednagar in the Indian state of Maharashtra has led to remarkable results.
more...From: OneWorld South Asia Related topics/regions: [India] [South Asia] [Land] [Conservation] Image: Whose grass is it anyway?
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12.11.2007
Food and Agricultural Organizations latest prediction of high global prices of cereals in the coming year has led to debates on future prices of agricultural commodities in both rich and poor trading countries. With growing demand for food, feed and industrial use many countries will pay more for importing cereals than they did before, even though they are expected to import less, the report says.
more...Related topics/regions: [Food] [Economy] [Trade] [United Nations] Image: A food market
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12.11.2007
Of the hundred and fifty thousand suicides by farmers in India in the last decade, nearly two-thirds have occurred in the region where they have been engaged in growing cash crops. This region today has acquired a dubious distinction of Special Elimination Zone or suicide SEZ. The Special Economic Zones are lands earmarked for industrial growth with massive subsidies granted to capitalists.
more...Related topics/regions: [South Asia] [Poverty] [Economy] |
07.11.2007
Susan Smith of the National Confectioners Association responds to OneWorld's article on fair trade chocolate for Halloween.
more...Related topics/regions: [West Africa] [Children] [Poverty] [Business] [Consumption] [Corporations] [Trade] |
07.11.2007
UNITED NATIONS, Nov 6 (IPS) - A long-held basic human right, the right to adequate food for the world's 854 million hungry people, is being threatened once again -- this time by the conversion of wheat, sugar, palm oil and maize into agricultural fuel.
more...From: Inter Press Service (IPS) Related topics/regions: [Energy] [Food] [Renewable energy] |
06.11.2007
Crop failures, rising debts and state apathy are making farmers take their own lives in the prosperous Indian state of Gujarat. Debt-ridden families are now calling upon the government to compensate their losses.
more...Related topics/regions: [India] [South Asia] [Poverty] [Debt] [Governance] Image: Farmers need government protection © Panos London
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06.11.2007
South Asian countries rely heavily on rainwater for irrigation. But with the employment of zero tillage technique, the irrigation demand for rice and wheat farming has substantially come down.
more...Related topics/regions: [South Asia] [Land] [Conservation] [Soils] Image: Wheat requires less irrigation with zero tillage method
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06.11.2007
A proposal to grow opium poppy for medical use by the Afghan Senlis Council and the European Parliament has led to outrage among narcotics experts and officials working to end the opium trade. Legalizing poppy production, they fear, will lead to further insecurity among people.
more...Related topics/regions: [Afghanistan] [South Asia] [Economy] [Narcotics] [Conflict] [Terrorism] Image: Opium poppy is grown in southern Afghanistan © IRIN
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02.11.2007
In the Indian state of Punjab, the natural farmers movement, Kheti Virasat Mission, is trying to rejuvenate land that has lost its fertility due to decades of chemical intensive farming.
more...Related topics/regions: [South Asia] [Land] [Conservation] Image: A natural farming workshop
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