IDH, RySS partnership Awarded Under P4G’s Green Growth Initiative
Selected after a global competition, P4G awards USD 600,000 to the Partnership in scale-up funding to implement a Verified Sourcing Area (VSA) for commodity crops in Andhra Pradesh in India.
The Sustainable Sourcing at Scale Partnership between IDH, The Sustainable Trade Initiative and Rythu Sadhikara Samstha (RySS) is one of the seven partnerships that have been granted funding under P4G’s Partnering for Green Growth and the Global Goals 2030 Initiative in 2019.
Across the world, food producers, buyers, sellers, and consumers are making commitments towards sustainability. This means reducing food waste or curbing negative environmental and social impacts which are often inherent in producing commodities. However, despite national and global commitments, it remains difficult, expensive, and slow to ensure that, from production to sale, agricultural products consistently meet the sustainability requirements that various stakeholders are setting forth.
The Sustainable Sourcing at Scale Partnership will implement a VSA for commodity crops in Andhra Pradesh. Here 60% of the 50 million inhabitants are engaged in agricultural and related work. Rather than verifying sustainability farm by farm, the model takes a regional approach, which reduces costs for sustainable agriculture and allows markets to buy large scale volumes with greater efficiency, transparency, and traceability. This will position the VSA region in Andhra Pradesh to become a responsible source for commodities where the opportunity for an added local value exists. These commodities are chili, cashew, cotton, turmeric, and coffee. The Partnership will incorporate IDH’s learnings from VSA pilot programs in Brazil, Indonesia and Vietnam and draw on the reach of RySS, a non-profit organization that reaches more than half-million farmers.
Initially, the partners, IDH and RySS will create two sustainability clusters, each encompassing 10-12 villages. The program focuses on building farmer capacity through intensive engagement with community-level groups, women’s self-help groups, farmers, and Natural Farming Fellows. This will help both farmers and villages produce chemical-free products, obtain fair prices, and enhance the role of women farmers.
In longer term, the partnership seeks to scale the VSA to cover as many as 365,000 hectares. RySS, through its Zero Budget Natural Farming initiative, aims to cover more than 5.5 million farmers in Andhra Pradesh by 2025, with an estimated budget of USD 3 billion that would need to be mobilized during this period.
The Sustainable Sourcing at Scale Partnership between IDH, The Sustainable Trade Initiative and Rythu Sadhikara Samstha (RySS) is one of the seven partnerships that have been granted funding under P4G’s Partnering for Green Growth and the Global Goals 2030 Initiative in 2019.
Across the world, food producers, buyers, sellers, and consumers are making commitments towards sustainability. This means reducing food waste or curbing negative environmental and social impacts which are often inherent in producing commodities. However, despite national and global commitments, it remains difficult, expensive, and slow to ensure that, from production to sale, agricultural products consistently meet the sustainability requirements that various stakeholders are setting forth.
The Sustainable Sourcing at Scale Partnership will implement a VSA for commodity crops in Andhra Pradesh. Here 60% of the 50 million inhabitants are engaged in agricultural and related work. Rather than verifying sustainability farm by farm, the model takes a regional approach, which reduces costs for sustainable agriculture and allows markets to buy large scale volumes with greater efficiency, transparency, and traceability. This will position the VSA region in Andhra Pradesh to become a responsible source for commodities where the opportunity for an added local value exists. These commodities are chili, cashew, cotton, turmeric, and coffee. The Partnership will incorporate IDH’s learnings from VSA pilot programs in Brazil, Indonesia and Vietnam and draw on the reach of RySS, a non-profit organization that reaches more than half-million farmers.
Initially, the partners, IDH and RySS will create two sustainability clusters, each encompassing 10-12 villages. The program focuses on building farmer capacity through intensive engagement with community-level groups, women’s self-help groups, farmers, and Natural Farming Fellows. This will help both farmers and villages produce chemical-free products, obtain fair prices, and enhance the role of women farmers.
In longer term, the partnership seeks to scale the VSA to cover as many as 365,000 hectares. RySS, through its Zero Budget Natural Farming initiative, aims to cover more than 5.5 million farmers in Andhra Pradesh by 2025, with an estimated budget of USD 3 billion that would need to be mobilized during this period.