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Organic agriculture

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For mountain communities, engaging youth in agriculture and promoting micro, small and medium enterprises are key pillars supporting organic agriculture

Organic agriculture

Promoting mountain agriculture for sustainable mountain development has been a mainstay of our work for decades whether it was through rangeland management work in Bhutan, Nepal and Pakistan, shifting cultivation work in the Chittagong Hill Tracts in Bangladesh, and the food security work in Pakistan. We have also contributed to and been greatly encouraged by significant transitions towards organic agriculture in mountain areas such as Sikkim State in India. For mountain communities, engaging youth in agriculture and promoting micro, small and medium enterprises are key pillars supporting organic agriculture. To aggregate learning across the region on key policy environment requirements, to broaden networks among businesses, investors, and regional and international experts and to harness investment opportunities for organic agriculture business development, we co-hosted a Regional Organic Symposium in Thimphu, Bhutan.

The Royal Government of Bhutan has committed to shift completely to organic agriculture by 2035 and there is growing demand in the global organic agriculture market for products from the HKH. To support the government’s efforts and to enhance market linkages, the symposium brought together farmers, businesspeople, climate and agriculture scientists from within and outside the HKH region, policymakers, government officials, and development experts.

Participants discussed a regional certification standard for organic products, which will provide credibility and accountability to enhance the global marketability of products from the region. To further support this certification and enhance knowledge exchange, the symposium discussed the establishment of a regional knowledge hub that can provide mentoring, incubation, and acceleration support for green and resilient enterprises.

Our ongoing work to mobilise farmers and ensure their participation in the development of organic farming at a commercial scale strengthens institutions such as farmers’ groups, cooperatives, and public-private partnerships to improve access to finance and networks. We continue to focus on a supportive policy environment for aggregation, branding, investment, and market development and to promote public-private partnerships for socially responsible production and benefit sharing with local communities.

The transition to organic agriculture requires a supportive policy environment for aggregation, branding, investment, and market development and promotion of public-private partnerships for socially responsible production and benefit-sharing.

Chapter 1

Mountain innovations and community practices

Gender equality in tourism enterprises

Tourism is an important priority area for national and local governments across Bhutan, India, and Nepal. ...

2 Dec 2019 RMS
Reviving drying springs

A project in Nepal’s middle hills works to address problems of water scarcity In Tinpiple, a village in Kavre District approximately ...

What ever happened to shifting cultivation?

Addressing second generation issues in shifting cultivation landscapes ...

Incentives for ecosystem services

Nepal’s Forest Act (2019) now integrates payment for ecosystem services through a special provision

2 Dec 2019 Livelihoods
Community based chyura and beekeeping enterprise improves rural livelihoods

Chyura, also called the 'Indian Butter Tree' grows abundantly around KSL-CDI pilot villages in the Bin and Munakot blocks of Pithoragarh. Chyura ...

3 Dec 2019 RMS
Straw Mulches aid farmers battling drought

As she planted her batch of bitter gourds in Kalchhe Besi last year, Kamala Timalsina was unsure if they would ...

3 Dec 2019 HICAP
Filling knowledge gaps in the HKH

Initial HICAP study results "The climate has already changed a lot. Last year we suffered from floods, now we are suffering ...