VMPL
New Delhi [India], November 27: India's colonial history involved systematic planned wealth extraction, and with years it led to manipulation of natural resources, disrupting-harming steadily the traditional agricultural systems. Post-independence, rapid population growth further intensified pressure on small-scale, disorganized farming; introducing harmful ways of exploitation for more production from farming, leading to environmental damage, including soil degradation, groundwater depletion, and biodiversity loss and adverse impact on health. Steady impact on farming practices, reliant on chemical fertilizers and toxic pesticides, exacerbate these issues, posing risks to ecological and human health and food security and increased risk.
Strategies for Sustainable Wealth Creation
1. Transforming the Farming Sector
The disorganized, small-scale farming sector, coupled with population growth, contributes to environmental stress and poverty, alongside the current day business and policy making ecosystem that has done more harm than good, with the gap between haves and have nots ever widening, rising chronic health issues and environmental hazards. The increased introduction and propagation of practices that, eventually led to degradation of soil fertility, deplete groundwater, and harm biodiversity, undermining long-term productivity. The Vihara Foundation proposes aggregating farmers into cooperatives managing parcels of at least 100 hectares (1 square kilometre) to:
- Implement natural farming practices for soil restoration, water conservation, and groundwater recharge.
- Preserve biodiversity by reducing chemical inputs.
- Enhance collective decision-making to adopt sustainable practices, offsetting costs and increasing harvest yields but not at the cost of environment and health.
This systems-thinking approach restructures unsustainable farming practices into solutions that align with nature, delivering economic benefits and supporting the carbon economy and United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
2. Controlling the Market Value Chain
Disorganized farming leaves small-scale farmers vulnerable to exploitation by middlemen, reducing their earnings and perpetuating poverty. The Vihara Foundation aims to empower farmers by:
- Forming producer and processing enterprises owned by farmer cooperatives.
- Leveraging collective assets (land, labor) to negotiate with investors for infrastructure to support the entire value chain (e.g., processing mills, branding).
- Enabling farmers to retain majority shares in processing and value-added products, internalizing commodity value and increasing profitability.
This model shifts farmers from mere producers to stakeholders in the value chain, enhancing economic resilience and sustainable wealth.
3. Funding the Transition
Accessing capital for whole-systems projects remains a significant challenge, with limited government funding support available. The Vihara Foundation is innovating to raise funds through stakeholder partnerships, inviting investors and organizations to collaborate in implementing these solutions. By addressing poverty through sustainable agriculture, we aim to create scalable models that generate long-term wealth and environmental benefits.
Challenges
- Historical Legacy: Colonial exploitation and post-independence population growth have fragmented India's farming sector, complicating sustainable transitions.
- Environmental Stress: Step out of Farming practices that degrade critical resources, requiring systemic reform to restore ecological balance and humanness.
- Funding Barriers: Lack of accessible government funding necessitates innovative financing models to scale cooperative farming initiatives.
- Market Exploitation: Middlemen reduce farmer profits, necessitating cooperative models to empower farmers in the value chain.
Conclusion
Sustainable wealth in India hinges on transforming disorganized farming into cooperative, eco-friendly systems that restore humaneness, natural resources and empower farmers economically. The Vihara Foundation's model--aggregating farmers, controlling the value chain, and securing innovative funding--offers a pathway to alleviate poverty, enhance food security, and address climate risks. We invite stakeholders to join us in building a resilient, prosperous future for India's rural communities.
LinkedIn Link: linkedin.com/in/dennis-ramdahin-a925288
Chief Sustainable Development Strategist | Smart City Master Planner - Whole System Design | Green Technology Investment Lead |Women Development | Carbon Credits
(ADVERTORIAL DISCLAIMER: The above press release has been provided by VMPL. ANI will not be responsible in any way for the content of the same.)
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