Latest news with #CauveryCalling


The Hindu
3 days ago
- General
- The Hindu
Sapling plantation drives undertaken across Coimbatore district to aid environmental restoration
As part of efforts to improve green cover and restore ecological balance, large-scale sapling plantation initiatives were undertaken across Coimbatore district. The Coimbatore District Crusher and Quarry Association, in association with the Department of Mining, planted over 3,000 saplings, including native varieties such as mango, neem, Arasu, Vakai and Pungan in the Chettipalayam locality, marking the occasion of World Environment Day. An additional 2,000 saplings were planted in Mettupalayam, taking the total to 5,000 saplings across the district. Additional Collector, Coimbatore District Rural Development Agency, Sanket Balwant Waghe, Deputy Director of Geology and Mining G. Panneerselvam, state president of the Crusher and Quarry Association K. Chinnaswamy, and district president KCP Chandra Prakash were among those present at the event. The Cauvery Calling movement, led by the Isha Foundation, facilitated the planting of 1.36 crore saplings across 34,000 acres in the Cauvery River basin during the year 2024-25. With this, the total number of saplings planted since the movement's inception reached 12.2 crore. Saplings including teak, red sandalwood, and mahogany are distributed at subsidised rates as a part of this initiative.


India Gazette
4 days ago
- General
- India Gazette
1.36 cr saplings planted in 2024-25 under Cauvery Calling, total plantation soars to 12.2 cr
Coimbatore (Tamil Nadu) [India], June 5 (ANI): Envisioned by Spiritual guru, Sadhguru, the Cauvery Calling movement enabled the plantation of 1.36 crore saplings across 34,000 acres in the Cauvery basin during 2024-25. According to a press release by the Isha Foundation, to date, a total of 12.2 crore saplings have been planted, supporting 2.38 lakh farmers in adopting tree-based agriculture. Remarkably, in the last year alone, 50,931 farmers and citizens actively participated in this large-scale ecological effort. Cauvery Calling is the world's largest farmer-driven ecological initiative and a groundbreaking eco-restoration effort with the potential to transform tropical regions. Named Top Innovator by the Trillion Trees: India Challenge, the movement aims to rejuvenate the Cauvery River--lifeline to 8.4 crore people--while enhancing farmers' incomes by enabling the plantation of 242 crore trees on private farmland. It promotes tree-based agriculture that helps enrich soil health and improve water retention, in turn helping sustain the river's year-round flow, as per the press release. Sadhguru had earlier shared, 'Cauvery Calling will demonstrate to the world that it is possible to change the terrain of degraded Land by taking planned & strategised Action. Everyone who is nourished by Soil & Water must be a part of this Movement. Let Us Make It Happen.' Reflecting on the achievement, Anand Ethirajalu, Project Director of Cauvery Calling and representative of the Save Soil movement, emphasised the urgency of soil regeneration- one of the key objectives of the movement. As per the press release, he said, 'One of the key topics that we were campaigning during this COP29 summit of UNFCCC and COP16 of UNCCD is that less than 4 per cent of the global climate finance is actually reaching agriculture and food systems.' 'We highlighted this because climate change cannot be fixed in the atmosphere. It can be fixed only in the soil. Putting more focus and investment in soil regeneration through tree-based agriculture is the need of the hour, and that's what we've been doing,' Ethirajalu added. According to the statement by Isha Foundation, providing a large quantity of quality saplings is crucial to achieving the goal of planting over a crore saplings each year. The Cauvery Calling production centres play a vital role in this effort. The production centres include a nursery in Cuddalore, one of the world's largest single-site nurseries, entirely run by women, with a capacity to produce 85 lakh saplings. Together with the nursery at Thiruvannamalai, which produces 15 lakh saplings, these centres form the backbone of the initiative. These nurseries supply 40 distribution centres across Tamil Nadu and 10 centres in Karnataka. Together, these nurseries offer 29 high-value timber species, including Teak, Red Sandalwood, Rosewood, and Mahogany at a subsidised rate of Rs. 3 per sapling. The Nursery at Sadhguru Sannidhi Bengaluru also reached a significant milestone of enabling the plantation of 1,00,000 saplings since its inception in December 2023. At present, it has enabled the plantation of over 1.3 lakh saplings. Cauvery Calling is enhancing farmer livelihoods by enabling them to run sapling production and distribution franchises. Farmers are trained and supported to manage nurseries and supply high-quality organic saplings to their communities. The initiative deployed over 160 field executives to visit more than 32,000 farmlands. These executives offer free consultations from pre-plantation to post-plantation, aiming to spread awareness about the benefits of adopting tree-based agriculture. During the visits, the executives check soil type, soil depth and conduct water tests and recommend tree species suitable for their respective farmlands. These recommendations are carefully curated after considering the region's endemic tree varieties, agro-climatic conditions and income-cycle expectations of the farmers. Cauvery Calling also engages with farmers through Farmer Producer Organisations (FPOs), NGOs, Krishi Vigyan Kendras, Gram Panchayats, and agricultural expos. Over 52,000 farmers are supported through 225+ active WhatsApp groups that provide real-time advice. A dedicated helpline, operational daily from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m., resolves farmer queries within 24-48 hours using insights from experts and model farmers, according to the press release. The movement also organised 2 mega training programs and 6 zonal programs in 2024, with 8,721 farmers participating. Experts from prestigious institutions like the National Research Centre for Banana (NRCB), Indian Institute of Horticultural Research (IIHR), National Institute of Food Technology Entrepreneurship and Management (NIFTEM), and Central Tuber Crops Research Institute (CTCRI) shared practical knowledge about tree-based agriculture. In 2024, on landmark days such as World Environment Day (June 5), Van Mahotsav Week (July 1-7), Gandhi Jayanti (October 2), and World Soil Day (December 5) etc, 506 plantation events were conducted, resulting in the planting of 10 lakh saplings. (ANI)


Time of India
4 days ago
- General
- Time of India
World Environment Day: Sadhguru's Cauvery Calling adds 1.36 crore trees; aim to revive river
. On World Environment Day, Cauvery Calling—a movement aimed at reviving the Cauvery River—marked a major milestone: 1.36 crore saplings planted in just the last year. This brings the total count since its launch to over 12 crore trees across the river basin, a region that supports more than 8 crore people. Started by spiritual leader Sadhguru but largely driven on the ground by farmers and community workers, the initiative promotes tree-based farming as a long-term fix for environmental degradation and shrinking farm incomes. Trees were planted across 34,000 acres in the Cauvery basin. Around 2.38 lakh farmers have reportedly made the switch to tree-based agriculture—a shift seen as more climate-resilient and profitable in the long run. — sadhgurujv (@sadhgurujv) Cauvery Calling's long-term goal is to plant 242 crore trees on private farmland to help restore the river's flow and improve groundwater levels. It will also improve soil health, retain water better, and buffer farms against climate swings. Key to the initiative's success is one of the largest nurseries supplying saplings is in Cuddalore, Tamil Nadu, run entirely by women. It produces lakhs of subsidised, high-value timber saplings each year. These are distributed across Tamil Nadu and Karnataka through 50 regional centres. On the ground, field workers support farmers through every stage—from assessing soil depth to choosing the right tree species. There's also a WhatsApp network and a helpline to answer queries, while agricultural scientists run training sessions to build local capacity.