KartavyaDesk
news

UPSC Editorial Analysis: Reimagining Carbon Farming: The Promise of Agroforestry in India

Kartavya Desk Staff

*General Studies-3; Topic: Conservation, Environmental Pollution and Degradation, Environmental Impact Assessment*

Introduction

Agroforestry integrates trees and shrubs with crops and livestock, ensuring ecological balance while diversifying income.

• It covers 28.4 million hectares, around 8.65% of India’s total land area.

• This system contributes nearly one-fifth (19.3%) of India’s carbon stock, highlighting its role in climate change mitigation.

Agroforestry as a Carbon Sink

• Studies reveal that, with robust policies and financial incentives, agroforestry could sequester over 2.5 billion tons of CO₂ equivalent by 2030.

• Through Afforestation, Reforestation, and Revegetation (ARR) projects, agroforestry enhances land restoration, soil fertility, and climate resilience.

Challenge: The ‘Common Practice’ Criterion

• Current carbon finance mechanisms evaluate projects by whether they exceed common agricultural practices.

• Standards such as Verra’s Verified Carbon Standard (VCS) and Gold Standard suit large, uniform farmlands found in the Americas.

• India’s reality is different—86.1% of farmers are small or marginal, with holdings below two hectares.

• Their dispersed tree-crop systems are classified as “common,” denying access to carbon finance, and limiting the sector’s growth potential.

Need for India-Specific Carbon Finance

• India must redesign the “common practice” definition to reflect its fragmented land patterns.

• Such recalibration would: Enable millions of smallholders to earn carbon credits. Integrate them into ARR-linked carbon markets. Strengthen both climate action and rural income diversification.

• Enable millions of smallholders to earn carbon credits.

• Integrate them into ARR-linked carbon markets.

• Strengthen both climate action and rural income diversification.

Economic and Environmental Payoffs

Income Diversification: Farmers gain an additional revenue stream via carbon credits, stabilizing earnings against crop and monsoon risks.

Environmental Gains: Agroforestry restores degraded soil, conserves water, and prevents erosion.

Rural Development: Carbon finance and improved land use can revitalize village economies, reducing migration and distress.

Persistent Barriers

Low Awareness: Farmers often remain uninformed about agroforestry’s benefits.

High Initial Costs: Saplings, fencing, and care require capital that smallholders lack.

Land and Water Constraints: Competing crop priorities and water scarcity discourage tree planting.

Climate Sensitivity: Droughts, floods, and storms can wipe out years of effort, making the practice risky without insurance or support.

Institutional and Policy Support

• The Energy and Resources Institute (TERI) has demonstrated success with 19 projects across seven states, impacting over 56,600 farmers.

• Scaling such initiatives demands that global carbon markets adjust their criteria to include India’s mosaic of small farms.

• The government’s role is pivotal through policy incentives, credit facilities, and awareness campaigns.

Reforming Global Standards

Contextual Adaptation: International certification bodies like Verra and Gold Standard should recognize India’s unique agrarian structure.

Inclusive Carbon Finance: Redefining “common practice” can open carbon market access to smallholders, promoting equity, climate resilience, and rural prosperity.

Way Forward

Strengthening Resilience: Link agroforestry with formal carbon markets to tackle environmental and economic challenges together.

Empowering Farmers: Train and organize smallholders into cooperatives for collective carbon credit trading.

Capacity Building: Conduct local workshops on tree-crop integration, carbon measurement, and sustainable practices.

Financial Backing: Expand subsidies and low-interest loans to fund initial planting and maintenance.

Global Leadership: With tailored policies, India could become a model for community-based carbon farming, contributing significantly to global mitigation targets.

Conclusion

• Realizing agroforestry’s full potential demands an integrated approach involving: Farmer education and participation, Targeted financial and institutional support, and Effective carbon market linkages.

Farmer education and participation,

Targeted financial and institutional support, and

Effective carbon market linkages.

• These reforms can simultaneously address climate change, rural poverty, and land degradation, positioning India as a leader in sustainable agro-ecosystem management.

“Recent research suggests that agroforestry could contribute over 2.5 billion tons of CO₂ equivalent by 2030. Discuss the role of agroforestry as a carbon sink through Afforestation, Reforestation, and Revegetation (ARR) initiatives in India.” (250 words)

AI-assisted content, editorially reviewed by Kartavya Desk Staff.

About Kartavya Desk Staff

Articles in our archive published before our editorial team was expanded. Legacy content is periodically reviewed and updated by our current editors.

All News