Sikkim Chief Minister Pawan Chamling on Monday called for global cooperation to make agriculture totally organic the world over by 2050, citing the achievement of his Himalayan state in northeastern India.
Addressing a news conference at the Chamber of Deputies in the Italian Parliament, Chamling said that to heed the warnings of climate scientists about impending dangers, the world must adopt farming without chemical fertilisers and pesticides as that would help reduce carbon emissions by 50 per cent.
"If we can do it in Sikkim, there is no reason it cannot be done elsewhere," he said.
Chamling was expected to receive later on Monday the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation's (FAO) Future Policy Gold Award for Sikkim's achievement in becoming the world's first totally organic agriculture state.
The news conference was hosted by the leaders of Italy's Agriculture Commission and Environment Committee, who praised Sikkim's achievement as a trendsetter for the world.
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Italian MP Rossella Muroni, the Free and Equal Party leader on the Environment Committee, congratulated Chamling and Sikkim for their pioneering work and showing how organic farming was possible.
Maria Chiara Gadda, the Democratic Party leader at the Agriculture Commission, said that Sikkim was an inspiration for striving towards sustainable organic farming.
Chamling said that organic farming was a form of action of non-violence.
He said when his government embarked on the organic farming mission in 2003, it was confronted by opposition parties and vested interests of the chemical sector. But through hard work backed by a strong political commitment, Sikkim was able to overcome the odds and become totally organic by 2015.
"Based on my long experience and association with the organic initiative, I can tell you in all good faith
and confidence that a 100 per cent organic world is possible. If we could do it in Sikkim, there is no reason
why policy makers, farmers and community leaders cannot do the same elsewhere in the world."
"If we are to heed the warnings of the climate scientists then we have to stop the use of chemical fertilisers globally by over 50 per cent immediately. This will reduce the carbon dioxide emission by half," Chamling said.
Now, several Indian states like Kerala and those in the northeast were trying to follow the example of Sikkim.
It is important to involve the youth in the organic mission and many educated young farmers in the state have developed marketing strategies that take the state's produce to places as far away as Delhi and Bengaluru, he said.
"Sikkim is the most peaceful state in India... it is the best in many ways," Chamling said, highlighting its gender equality and the absence of extreme poverty or religious and caste tensions.
Vandana Shiva, environment activist and President of Navdanya International, said that "organic zones" were the "zones of democracy".
"Sikkim shows the world it is possible to be 100 per cent free of the chemicals that destroy and defeat the forces that promote them," she said.
--IANS
al/soni/bg
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