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Friday / December 20. 2024
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The one-day event felicitated farmers who supported and worked with Agoro Carbon Alliance

Agoro Carbon Alliance recently organised the Agoro Carbon Alliance Kharif Summer Season Launch event at Randoli, Karnal in Haryana. Over 150 farmers including farmers associated with Agoro Carbon took part in the event.

The event was organised to recognise the efforts of the farmers, their families, and channel partners who have worked with Agoro Carbon and have assisted them at every step of the way in promoting sustainable carbon farming.

Anastasia Pavlovic, COO, Agoro Carbon Alliance, Agoro Carbon Alliance Prithviraj Sen Sharma, MD and Country Head of Agoro Carbon Alliance India, Dr Yebin Zhao, Global Agronomist, Agoro Carbon Alliance, Giulia Sartori, Carbon Project Developer Expert, Agoro Carbon Alliance, Shaara Rahim, Strategic Advisor to the CEO, and Dr Sudarshan Dutta, Lead Agronomist, India, Agoro Carbon Alliance took part in the event.

The event witnessed the launch of the Agoro Carbon Mitra programme by Pavlovic. A team from the local Punjab and Haryana-based YCNCs (Yara Crop Nutrition Centres), along with office bearers from Yara Fertilisers, were present at the event.

Pavlovic honoured Saroj Kalra as Agoro Carbon Mahila Kisan, an initiative launched at the event to give women farmers a platform to empower them with knowledge of sustainable and carbon farming practices.

The one-day event felicitated farmers who supported

Effective April 1 2022, Agoro Carbon will become an independent business, and full legal entity separate from parent company, Yara.

Agoro Carbon Alliance has announced that it will become an independent business, effective April 1 2022. This planned move makes Agoro Carbon Alliance a full legal entity separate from Yara and is part of the business’s long-term strategy to decarbonize agriculture.

Agoro Carbon Alliance will remain 100 per cent owned and backed by Yara and will continue to have a close working relationship. Following the separation, all Agoro Carbon Alliance’s existing contracts with growers, partners and vendors will be transferred unchanged to the new company.

After legally formalizing this independence, Agoro Carbon Alliance is taking the next step on its journey to becoming a high-impact global business. By ensuring strategic control and flexibility, Agoro Carbon Alliance is even better able to help its farmer partners succeed in their decarbonization journeys, unlocking increased profitability and environmental benefits for farms around the world. Additionally, this independent status opens longer-term possibilities for new investors to join the alliance of farmers, ranchers, agronomists, co-ops, retailers, and other businesses.

Alex Bell, CEO of Agoro Carbon Alliance, said: “Our independent status gives us the best of both worlds: enabling Yara’s full strategic backing of Agoro Carbon, while giving us even more operational flexibility. Agoro Carbon will continue to focus on practical agronomic excellence and be input and practice agnostic. The separation underscores our intent and confirms our ability to be entirely focused on providing best in class and unbiased farmer enablement to generate premium environmental assets for responsible buyers and investors.”

Effective April 1 2022, Agoro Carbon will

By Dr Sudarshan Dutta, Lead Agronomist, India, Agoro Carbon Alliance.

Food is necessary for our survival, growth, and development. Similarly, if the plants get good nutrition, their ultimate growth and yield improve. Plant obtains its nourishment from the soil. In fact, the soil is a habitat for plants, microorganisms, and animals and even higher players of the food chain and their existence are interlinked. So, healthy soils are, in a nutshell, the backbone of the food system. 

Indeed, food quality and quantity are inextricably tied to soil quality. Healthy soil leads to healthy plants, which feed people and animals. And the health of the soil can be improved with crop nutrition management, which plays a crucial role in crops’ vegetative and reproductive growth.

Role of crop nutrition management

Plants require 17 vital minerals, each of which serves a different purpose. And a deficiency of any of these minerals will harm plant growth and yield. Many of these critical elements are present in the soil but are insufficient to support substantial crop yields. Besides this, soil and climatic factors might impede a plant’s nutrition intake capacity throughout critical growth stages.

As a result, crop nutrient management is pivotal to raising productivity while safeguarding the environment. This process is based on balancing soil nutrient inputs with crop requirements. Hence, when used in the proper amounts and at the right times, it can aid in maximising crop yields.

Evaluating soil health through soil testing 

Determining crop nutrient requirements is the starting point for creating a nutrient management plan. In humans, blood tests are used to determine whether or not a person is healthy. Similarly, in the case of soil, soil testing is used to check the health of the soil. Soil has physical, chemical, and biological aspects. So, to develop the optimum measurements for assessing soil health, we must consider all three characteristics and choose specific metrics relevant to our intended use of the soil. Soil testing can help determine the plant nutrient supplying capacity of the soil. It also helps determine the amount of each nutrient (Nitrogen-phosphorus-potassium and other essential elements, soil physicochemical properties (such as pH, EC, and organic matter) present in the soil profile.

Soil health evaluation enables the farmer to see how soil health is changing over time. Is it getting better or worse? Once we know the direction of change, we can use specialized management methods to mitigate degradation if the soil is in bad shape or keep following the same process if the soil shows improvement.

Including crop diversification for enriching soil

Crop diversification is the cultivation of multiple varieties of crops belonging to the same or different species in a particular area in the form of crop rotation or intercropping. 

This process aids in the alleviation of nutritional deficiencies while also supporting sustainable agriculture. For example, introducing nitrogen-fixing crops, such as legumes, into a typical cropping system can improve soil health by making atmospheric nitrogen available to other plants, lowering the need for mineral fertilisers.

Additionally, crop diversification offers environmental benefits and can be utilised to alleviate the consequences of climate change by enhancing agroecosystems’ ability to respond to environmental shocks. It also broadens a farmer’s crop portfolio, reducing their reliance on a single crop for income.

Following a balanced crop nutrition approach

A balanced crop nutrition approach uses the smallest effective dose of sufficient and balanced amounts of organic and inorganic fertilisers in conjunction with specific microorganisms to make nutrients more available and effective for maintaining high yields without exposing soil native nutrients or polluting the environment. Just like humans, plants also require a well-balanced diet to thrive. It helps produce vigorous, healthy plants with good flower initiation, fertilisation, and fruit set.

Conclusion

Crop nutrition management can help farmers boost profitability while enhancing environmental sustainability and resilience. So, to keep Indian agriculture afloat sustainably, we must be aware of the needs of our soils, crops, and farmers’ households, and execute the most effective and balanced nutrient management approach possible.

By Dr Sudarshan Dutta, Lead Agronomist, India,