An Overview Of Our Solution
- Population Impacted:
- Continent: Europe
Organization type
Population impacted
Size of agricultural area
Production quantity
People employed
Describe your solution
Describe your implementation
External connections
What is the environmental or ecological challenge you are targeting with your solution?
Describe the context in which you are operating
The project takes place in a region with one of the highest levels of land degradation in Europe.
The conventional way of farming does not result in the same yields and economic security as it used to. Instead, it leads to failing yields, more resistant plagues and decreasing water levels. Ecological farming is something that is believed to be less productive, more costly and is more vulnerable to plagues.Farming is seen as a marginal lifestyle that one should not want for their kids, resulting in an exodus of young people from the countryside, thereby decreasing the liveliness in the villages further.
From the environmental problems, erosion is one of the biggest we have in our region. The numbers are quite impressive if we consider that on our rain fed plots the average erosion rate is 46 tons of soil per hectare per year.
Our climate is a big limitation, with an average rainfall of 370mm and major rainfall events in the last 5 years (more than 70mm in one day) with more that 50% of the rain of the year, and a big reduction of spring rain.
How did you impact natural resource use and greenhouse gas emissions?
Language(s)
Social/Community
Water
Food Security/Nutrition
Economic/Sustainable Development
Climate
Sustainability
The sustainability of the solution to be as efficient and fast as possible relies on a three factors. Funding is needed to start with regenerative practices, especially the ones that are most expensive and have longer term effects, like ponds, biodiversity bushes and sediment traps. This can be grant funding or government subsidies. A market based revenue for products that come from regenerative farming can help a lot to allow farmers keep doing regenerative practices constantly, not only when there are grants or subsidies.