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ys Labangalatika dasi

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<newsletter (AT) csenews (DOT) org

<newsletter (AT) csenews (DOT) org

Thursday, December 08, 2005 6:05 PM

The 'other' food crisis - CSE news bulletin[Dec. 8, 2005]

 

 

Please add CSE's fortnightly news bulletin to your Address Book so

this newsletter doesn't get filtered or tossed into your bulk folder

 

=============================

 

CSE's Fortnightly News Bulletin [Dec. 8, 2005]

 

=============================

 

 

< http://www.cseindia.org/programme/industry/index.htm >

Email: monali (AT) cseindia (DOT) org

Mobile: +91-9811808883

 

This will make you weep. This is what is happening all around here. and

all over India

ys Labangalatika dasi

 

 

================================

 

Editorial: The 'other' food crisis

 

=================================

 

There is so much about rural India that escapes notice that one more

area of neglect will not break the camel's back. I am talking about

the crisis of fodder for livestock. A grim silence surrounds it. 'Grim

', because in rural India, domestic animals aren't 'pets' but engines

that drive the economy. They provide resilience and wealth -- people

cope with adverse conditions because of their livestock. But no policy

exists on how to feed these 500 million or so animals. Rural India

today isn't fodder-secure, and the grim reality is that food security

in this country is not possible without fodder security.

 

Fodder insecurity begins with the question: where are these animals to

get their food from? In India, less land has been set aside for

domestic livestock than for 'flora and fauna': protected areas such as

sanctuaries and national parks sprawl over 15 million hectares (ha),

while land classified as 'permanent pastures' cover 11 million ha.

Moreover, over the years, these 'permanent pastures' have shrunk or

simply degraded.

 

In addition, there officially exists 13 million ha of land classified

as 'culturable wasteland'. Couldn't such land provide fodder? Yes, but

not country-wide: only two states, Rajasthan and Gujarat (both

livestock-dependent), account for roughly half such land. Also,

'culturable wastelands' are controlled by state revenue departments:

usually, the rich are allowed to encroach upon them, or politicians

distribute them as 'largesse' under so-called land reform programmes.

If these lands, critical for rural life-support, don't get gobbled up,

they remain neglected and degraded.

 

Animals survive by foraging on available land and on agricultural

residues. But the productivity of our common lands -- forest and

revenue land -- are pathetic; grass yields on these are mostly

illusionary. Sheer grazing pressure ensures animals literally nibble

away a pasture's productivity, suppressing regeneration of grasses and

tree fodder. Add to these the fact that agricultural production is

stagnating, or that farmers are shifting to crops that do not yield

fodder. The result? Crisis.

 

How serious is this crisis? We don't know, empirically. What we know

is that unlike most other neglected issues -- be it fuelwood to cook

food or water to drink or food to avert famine or malnutrition

deaths -- this is a crisis about many kinds of neglect. First, it

concerns the very poor that depend on livestock to survive another

tomorrow. Second, it relates to the country's most neglected lands:

common forests. Third, it is about neglected animals.

 

So it is that I say: we must know now, to find the ways ahead. Trying

to put together a fodder-scenario is literally like catching straws in

the wind. Every time I travel to villages in dry and drought-prone

areas, or forested areas, I enquire about fodder. Poor people, living

within what we would believe is a non-cash economy, tell me what they

spend on buying fodder. That in the dry months, of peak shortage, they

end up spending as much as Rs 6,000 - 7,000 of their household income,

buying fodder at Rs 500-800 per tonne.

 

Ghazala Shahabuddin and her colleagues, studying villages in and

around the Sariska Tiger Reserve, find similar trends. They report

that even in villages located within forests, pastoral households

spend 31 per cent of their household expenditure on buying fodder -

commercial and farm fodder. This is the single largest expenditure

after food. In times of fodder stress, it costs a livestock owner Rs

600 - 1,000 per month to feed a buffalo. When milk yields improve, and

the buffalo owner gets an average daily yield of two litres per

buffalo, then selling this milk at Rs 10 per litre provides Rs 3,000

per month. But such yield is seasonal, so this earning is temporary;

expenditure on fodder, on the other hand, remains constant year-round.

 

Couldn't the solution to the above problem be animals with higher

milk-yields? The problem is also that animals with higher milk

yields -- the crossbred cows our planners are fond of -- need better

quality fodder. These animals do not forage on degraded land; they

require stall-feeding. Improving the animal economy, then, demands

improving the quality and quantity of fodder available to livestock.

But this has simply not been planned for, or done.

 

The fact is that the fodder crisis is part of the larger land and

water crisis of rural India. Better agricultural productivity on

private lands is a sure-shot source of additional fodder. But this

productivity is limited by the non-availability of water to irrigate

crops. Every time I ask people why they persist in taking their

animals to graze in forestlands, I am told that part of the problem is

there is no water to grow crops, and so, no agricultural residues for

animals to eat. Water then becomes the first enabling tool. It is,

therefore, imperative that we link fodder security to water

security -- building water recharge structures for irrigation.

 

But this is still half the story. The other half relates to the

largest grazing lands -- the common lands -- degraded through sheer

pressure. It is understood these lands ought to be regenerated. But

what needs to be further understood is that such regeneration is not

possible without factoring in the animal economy. Building boundary

walls to keep grazing animals out will not succeed; the pressure is

too great. Planting non-browsable species will also not work. In the

past, this has always led to greater shortage of fodder and,

domino-like, to greater pressure on forestlands. It has always led to

an unproductive stalemate between the forester and the grazier. It is,

therefore, clear we also need to link fodder security with forest

security -- replanting and regenerating our vast common lands.

 

But all this is still not the real story. The real story is that this

is an 'other' food crisis, raging through a forgotten animal world.

 

-- Sunita Narain

< editor (AT) downtoearth (DOT) org.in >

 

Read this editorial online >>

http://www.downtoearth.org.in/cover_nl.asp?mode=2

 

 

 

 

 

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