Organic Farming: As a Climate Change Adaptation and Mitigation Strategy
Author(s) -
Sartaj A. Wani,
Subhash Chand,
G.R. Najar,
M. D. Teli
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
current agriculture research journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2347-4688
pISSN - 2321-9971
DOI - 10.12944/carj.1.1.06
Subject(s) - climate change , organic farming , environmental science , sustainability , agriculture , carbon sequestration , climate change mitigation , environmental resource management , natural resource economics , environmental impact of agriculture , agroforestry , business , geography , ecology , economics , archaeology , carbon dioxide , biology
Organic farming, as an adaptation strategy to climate change and variability, is a concrete and sustainable option and has additional potential as a mitigation strategy. The careful management of nutrients and carbon sequestration in soils are significant contributors in adaptation and mitigation to climate change and variability in several climate zones and under a wide range of specific local conditions. Organic farming, as a systematic approach for sustained biological diversity and climate change adaptation through production management, minimizing energy randomization of nonrenewable resources; and carbon sequestration is a viable alternative. The purpose of potential organic farming is therefore, to attempt a gradual reversal of the effects of climate change for building resilience and overall sustainability by addressing the key issues. Research is needed on yields and institutional environment for organic farming, as a mitigation and sequestration potential.
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