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Sustainable Sugarcane Initiative (SSI)

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Sustainable Sugarcane Initiative (SSI)

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Amazon
Area: 5888268 km2
Countries:
Brazil; Peru; Suriname; France; Colombia; Guyana; Bolivia; Venezuela; Ecuador
Cities:
Santa Cruz; Manaus; La Paz
PFAF ID:
HydroBasin Level:
Baseline Water Stress:
Water Quality Stress:
Sanitation Access Stress:
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Quick Info

Countries: India
Basins: Bay of Bengal (254) (Krishna)
Project SDGs:
Includes Sustainable Development Goals from the project and its locations.
Water Use Efficiency (SDG 6.4)
Protect and Restore Ecosystems (SDG 6.6)
Project Tags:
Includes tags from the project and its locations.
Nature-Based Solutions
Conservation Agriculture/Agronomy
Progress to Date: Total water volume: 940,000 cubic meters Total emission reductions
Services Needed: No services needed/offered
Desired Partners: NGO / Civil Society
Other
Language: English
Start & End Dates: Jun. 01, 2012  »  Ongoing
Project Website: www.firstclimate.com/unsere-wasserprojekte-sorgsamer-umgang-...
Contextual Condition(s): PHYSICAL: Ecosystem vulnerability or degradation, PHYSICAL: Unsustainable land use
Additional Benefits: Raised awareness of challenges among water users
Beneficiaries: Ecosystems, Agricultural growers, Local communities / domestic users
Planning & Implementation Time: More than 3 years
Primary Funding Source: ngo
Project Challenges: Other
Project Source: User
Profile Completion: 87%

Project Overview

Sustainable sugar cane cultivation in India

Sugar cane cultivation is becoming increasingly important in India. The reasons for this are on the one hand the increasing demand for the raw material sugar. On the other hand, sugar cane is also being used more and more to produce biofuels.

In order to meet the booming demand, sugar cane cultivation must be radically redesigned. The aim is to increase crop yields while reducing the use of water and fertilizers. The Sustainable Su…

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Sustainable sugar cane cultivation in India

Sugar cane cultivation is becoming increasingly important in India. The reasons for this are on the one hand the increasing demand for the raw material sugar. On the other hand, sugar cane is also being used more and more to produce biofuels.

In order to meet the booming demand, sugar cane cultivation must be radically redesigned. The aim is to increase crop yields while reducing the use of water and fertilizers. The Sustainable Sugarcane Initiative (SSI) for sustainable sugar cane cultivation, founded by the Indian company AgSri, supports smallholders through the necessary transformation process.

Project Videos

Basin and/or Contextual Conditions: PHYSICAL: Ecosystem vulnerability or degradation, PHYSICAL: Unsustainable land use
Project Benefits: Raised awareness of challenges among water users
Indirect or Direct Beneficiaries: Ecosystems, Agricultural growers, Local communities / domestic users
Months & Implementing: More than 3 years
Primary Funding Source: NGO / Civil society
Challenges: Other

Project Narrative

Sustainable sugar cane cultivation As part of the sustainable sugar cane cultivation project in India, a number of innovations are being introduced together with the farmers that make it possible to save large amounts of water. Instead of sugar cane seeds, the project farmers plant seedlings that have already germinated on their fields. Background: Large amounts of water are required to stimulate germination in the field. By growing the seedlings in the greenhouse, the amount of water required for irrigation can be reduced by around 90 percent. In addition, the farmers in the project are also starting to spread the seedlings in a regular pattern and at a significantly greater distance from one another. As a result, the plants have more strength, are healthier and deliver significantly higher yields. In addition, the new cultivation method also enables To set up systems for drip irrigation, with the help of which the amount of water required for cultivation can be further reduced. Farmers who implement some or all of the proposed farming methods will benefit from better crop yields and higher incomes. The project developer, AgSri, produces seedlings at low cost for smallholders and, as a developer of SSI techniques, also offers training for farmers. After the pilot phase has proven to be successful, AgSri plans to use the income from the sale of Water Benefit certificates to expand the sustainable sugar cane cultivation project from around 1,500 to 20,000 participants over the next five years.

Partner Organizations


First Climate is a globally leading provider of water project development and carbon offset services. We help our corporate clients across Europe, Asia-Pacific and the US to get engaged in water stewardship activities and manage and compensate their carbon emissions. … Learn More

Sascha Lafeld
Primary Contact  

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