24-Sep-2019: What is PGS?

The Union Agriculture Ministry’s Participatory Guarantee Scheme (PGS) should incentivise more farmers to grow organic food. “The certified organic food production is still very low. The PGS brings together peer group of farmers and the costs are low. It is being popularised,” Rita Teotia, chairperson of the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) said on the sidelines of a function of Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) and the World Health Organisation’s (WHO’s) Coordinating Committee for Asia (CCASIA) in Panaji.

What is the PGS, and how does it work?

PGS is a process of certifying organic products, which ensures that their production takes place in accordance with laid-down quality standards. The certification is in the form of a documented logo or a statement.

According to ‘Participatory Guarantee System for India [PGS-India]’, an ‘Operational Manual for Domestic Organic Certification’ published in 2015 by the National Centre of Organic Farming, Ghaziabad, under the Ministry of Agriculture’s Department of Agriculture and Co-operation, PGS is a “quality assurance initiative that is locally relevant, emphasize[s] the participation of stakeholders, including producers and consumers, and (which) operate[s] outside the framework of third-party certification”.

According to a 2008 definition formulated by the International Federation of Organic Agriculture Movements (IFOAM), the Bonn-based global umbrella organisation for the organic agriculture movement, PGSs are “locally focused quality assurance systems” that “certify producers based on active participation of stakeholders and are built on a foundation of trust, social networks and knowledge exchange”.

PGS, according to this definition, is “a process in which people in similar situations (in this case small holder producers) assess, inspect and verify the production practices of each other and take decisions on organic certification”.

Four pillars of PGS: The government’s 2015 PGS manual underlines that the system in India is based on “participatory approach, a shared vision, transparency and trust”.

PARTICIPATION: Stakeholders such as producers, consumers, retailers, traders, NGOs, Gram Panchayats, and government organisations and agencies are collectively responsible for designing, operating, and decision-making. Direct communication among the stakeholders helps create an integrity- and trust-based approach with transparency in decision-making, easy access to databases and, where possible, visits to farms by consumers.

SHARED VISION: Collective responsibility for implementation and decision making is driven by a common shared vision. Each stakeholder organisation or PGS group can adopt its own vision conforming to the overall vision and standards of the PGS-India programme.

TRANSPARENCY: At the grassroots level, transparency is maintained through the active participation of producers in the organic guarantee process, which can include information-sharing at meetings and workshops, peer reviews, and involvement in decision making.

TRUST: A fundamental premise of PGS is the idea that producers can be trusted, and that the organic guarantee system can be an expression and verification of this trust. The mechanisms for trustworthiness include a producer pledge made through a witnessed signing of a declaration, and written collective undertakings by the group to abide by the norms, principles and standards of PGS.

Advantages and limitations: Among the advantages of PGS over third-party certification, identified by the government document, are:

  • Procedures are simple, documents are basic, and farmers understand the local language used.
  • All members live close to each other and are known to each other. As practicing organic farmers themselves, they understand the processes well.
  • Because peer appraisers live in the same village, they have better access to surveillance; peer appraisal instead of third-party inspections also reduces costs
  • Mutual recognition and support between regional PGS groups ensures better networking for processing and marketing.
  • Unlike the grower group certification system, PGS offers every farmer individual certificates, and the farmer is free to market his own produce independent of the group. However, the operational manual also identifies some limitations of PGS.
  • PGS certification is only for farmers or communities that can organise and perform as a group within a village or a cluster of contiguous villages, and is applicable only to farm activities such as crop production, processing, and livestock rearing, and off-farm processing “by PGS farmers of their direct products”.
  • Individual farmers or group of farmers smaller than five members are not covered under PGS. They either have to opt for third party certification or join the existing PGS local group.
  • PGS ensures traceability until the product is in the custody of the PGS group, which makes PGS ideal for local direct sales and direct trade between producers and consumers.

11-Sep-2019: Prime Minister Launches National Animal Disease Control Programme

Prime Minister Narendra Modi launched the National Animal Disease Control Programme (NACDP) to control and eradicate the Foot & Mouth Disease (FMD) and Brucellosis amongst the livestock in the country, at Mathura.

The 12,652 Crore fully Central Government sponsored programme will vaccinate over 600 million cattle in the country in an effort to mitigate the two diseases.

The Prime Minister also launched the National Artificial Insemination Programme and a country wide workshop in all the Krishi Vigyan Kendras(KVKs) in all the 687 Districts of the country on vaccination and disease management, Artificial Insemination and Productivity.

Prime Minister said, “Environment and Livestock were always at the core of India’s economic thought and philosophy. And hence be it Swachh Bharat or Jal Jeevan Mission or promoting Agriculture & Animal Husbandry we always try to maintain a balance between Nature and Economy. And this is what enables us to build a strong new India.”

The Prime Minister also launched several other programmes concerning Livestock Health, Nutrition and Dairy Farming.

Animal Husbandry and other allied activities have a greater role to play in increasing the farmers’ income. Investments in Animal Husbandry, Fisheries, bee-keeping etc.… bring in more returns. In the last five years we have moved ahead with a new approach towards farming and allied activities. We have taken the necessary steps to improve the quality of livestock, dairy products and diversify them.

We need to find an appropriate solution for the regular supply of green fodder and nutritious diet to the livestock. Innovation and new technology is the need of the hour, to expand the Dairy Sector in India. We have launched the “Startup Brand Challenge” so that these innovations could come from our villages.

10-Aug-2019: Vice-President inaugurated Mukhya Mantri Krishi Aashirwad Scheme of Government of Jharkhand

Today, Vice-President Shri M. Venkaiah Naidu said that "Government of India has taken resolution to double the income of farmers till 2022. In this order, the Government is continuously increasing the minimum support price of 23 food grains and the minimum support price of forest products is also being fixed for our forest dweller brothers." 

He inaugurated Mukhyamantri  Krishi Aashirwad Scheme of Government of Jharkhand for increasing the income of farmers. Under this scheme, all the small and marginal farmers having maximum of 5 acres of agricultural land shall get grant in aid of Rs 5000 per acre every year which will also reduce their dependency on loan. This amount shall be given in two installments.

This Scheme will provide minimum Rs 5000/ and maximum Rs 25000/- every year to all the eligible farmers which shall be directly transferred to the bank accounts of the farmers through Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT).

Target for this year is to provide benefit to 35 lakh farmers. The amount of Rs 380.00 crores was distributed among around 10 lakh farmers as first installment in first stage.

On this occasion Vice-President emphasized on the need of water conservation and said, "harvesting, conservation of natural resources such as water is necessary. For this a comprehensive campaign for rain water harvesting shall be carried out, which will increase the ground water level. He warned that uncontrolled consumption/exploitation of groundwater is the cause of declining groundwater level which in turn is increasing the cost of irrigation. Vice-President urged the farmers to extend support in ground water conservation by adopting their traditional technique.