Tamil Nadu’s Valluvan Honoured as ‘UN FAO Soil Farmer Hero’

A farmer from Tamil Nadu, Valluvan (58) from Pollachi district, has been recognised as a “Soil Farmer Hero” by the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) for his remarkable transition to sustainable, tree-based multi-crop agriculture.

Once incurring losses of ₹200 per coconut tree, Valluvan transformed his 11-hectare farm into a highly productive enterprise earning ₹2.5–3 lakh per acre annually, demonstrating the potential of climate-resilient agriculture.

Valluvan’s Transformation Journey

  • Faced continuous losses before 2009
  • Shifted approach after exposure to: Isha Foundation’s Save Soil – Cauvery Calling programme promoted by Sadhguru Jaggi Vasudev
  • Adopted multi-crop, multi-tier tree-based farming system
Farming Model & Crop Diversity
  • Expanded from 3 crops to 14+ crop varieties
  • Crops include:
    • Coconut
    • Nutmeg
    • Pepper
    • 7 varieties of banana
    • Turmeric
    • Elephant yam
    • Curry leaves
    • 30 varieties of trees 

Economic & Soil Improvements

  • Income increased from: ₹30,000 to ₹2.5–3 lakh per acre annually
  • Soil organic carbon improved from: 0.5% (Year 1) to 1.56% (Year 7)
Climate Resilience & Water Efficiency
  • Farm survived two severe droughts, including: 2017 drought (no rainfall for 2 years, groundwater below 1,000 feet)
  • Key practices adopted: Mulching and Rainwater harvesting pits
  • Outcomes:
    • Reduced water usage to one-tenth of earlier levels
    • Expected to eliminate irrigation needs in future
Multi-Crop Farming as Climate & Income Safeguard
  • Provides economic stability (risk diversification)
  • Acts as a natural hedge against crop failure and climate shocks
  • According to project leadership: Tree-based agriculture is critical to tackling climate change and global warming

Cauvery Calling Initiative

  • Since 2019, the programme has: Planted 13.4 crore trees on private farmland
  • Target: 242 crore trees to restore river flow in Cauvery basin
Challenges Highlighted
  • Scaling and funding constraints
  • Policy barriers such as: Restrictive timber-sale regulations
  • Need for:
    • Drip irrigation support for tree crops
    • Insurance and subsidy schemes for agroforestry

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