Sustainable Farming in Australia | Organic and Regenerative Agriculture

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Practitioners of sustainable agriculture seek to integrate three main objectives into their work: a healthy environment, economic profitability, and social and economic equity. Every person involved in the food system—growers, food processors, distributors, retailers, consumers, and waste managers—can play a role in ensuring a sustainable agricultural system.

There are many practices commonly used by people working in sustainable agriculture and sustainable food systems. Growers may use methods to promote soil health, minimize water use, and lower pollution levels on the farm. Consumers and retailers concerned with sustainability can look for “values-based” foods that are grown using methods promoting farmworker wellbeing, that are environmentally friendly, or that strengthen the local economy. And researchers in sustainable agriculture often cross-disciplinary lines with their work: combining biology, economics, engineering, chemistry, community development, and many others. However, sustainable agriculture is more than a collection of practices. It is also the process of negotiation: a push and pulls between the sometimes competing interests of an individual farmer or of people in a community as they work to solve complex problems about how we grow our food and fiber.

Video Credits: Agriculture in Education

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Sustainable Farming in Australia | Organic and Regenerative Agriculture

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This good work should go a long way...road to better environment. Agrotourism is a wonderful model to add on to sustainable farming. I guess together we can do wonders to turn such beautiful places to eco perfect destination. Great work...more power to u..!👍

aasha
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Sustainable farm!!!! Great way to go through!!!

rashikashetty
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0:45 Europeans have destroyed the ecology and natural environment of India. For example the English colonisers used the natural waterways as a sewage canal, like they did in England. The River Thames was stinking die to the thousands of priviboxes which allowed excreta to fall directly into the river. In the Harappa, Mohenjidaro and Saraswati civilisations of India, over 4000 years back, town were planned with covered sewage system, as evident from the archeological excavations

SantoshK.Mangalore