A study conducted recently in the predominantly tribal Jawhar and Mokhada talukas of the district by International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI), New Delhi, has revealed that there is a need to develop climate smart villages in the region by following the CCAFS (Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security) research programme.
IFPRI's research personnel Md Tajuddin Khan and Manoj Kumar said during a discussion with farmers they felt that in this changing climate scenario and lack of technical and financial resources in tribal farmers' community, there is a need to promote climate smart villages in the region.
Villages can be made climate smart through weather forecasts and crop advisories, rainwater harvesting, crop rotation that reduces water needed for irrigation, agroforestry, site-specific nutrient management and green manuring and crop residue management, they said.
The researchers held discussions with farmers in Kelicha-pada village of Mokhada and Mendhyacha-pada village of Jawhar to understand their perception and awareness about climate change adaptation.
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They said that extreme climate events, like droughts and floods, change in rainfall pattern due to late onset of monsoon and long dry spell and declining number of rainy days, always pose a significant threat to sustainable development of agriculture and its dependent livelihood.
Jawhar taluka agriculture officer Anand Kamble said the farmers in the region should adapt to climate change.
For the last three years, the changes in weather and rainfall conditions have damaged crops in the region. There is an urgent need for capacity building activities towards agronomic practices and need for innovative and conservation agriculture practices for farmers in the region to make them efficient and smart, he said.
IFPRI is an international agricultural research centre. Its mission is to seek sustainable solutions for ending hunger and poverty through research.