Bengal's 'Matir Srishti' Wins UN FAO Recognition for Boosting Farmlands

The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization has awarded West Bengal's 'Matir Srishti' initiative an international certificate for its community-driven work in natural heritage preservation. Launched in 2020, the program has successfully transformed dry, non-arable land in western districts into fertile, irrigated multi-crop zones. The UN FAO also recognized the state's famed aromatic rice varieties—Gobindbhog, Tulaipanji, and Kanakchur—as food and culture heritage. This marks another international accolade for the state, following the UN Public Service Award in 2017 for the Kanyashree Prakalpa scheme.

Key Points: UN FAO Recognizes Bengal's Matir Srishti & Aromatic Rice

  • UN FAO awards certificate for Matir Srishti
  • Program transforms dry barren land into fertile multi-crop zones
  • Creates lakhs of rural livelihood opportunities
  • Also recognizes Gobindbhog, Tulaipanji, Kanakchur rice
  • Follows 2017 UN award for Kanyashree scheme
3 min read

CM Mamata announces UN FAO recognition for 'Matir Srishti' initiative

West Bengal's Matir Srishti program receives UN FAO certificate for transforming barren land, conserving biodiversity, and boosting farmer livelihoods.

"Proud to share that the United Nations has recognised our initiative yet again. - Mamata Banerjee"

Kolkata, Feb 18

West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee on Wednesday said that the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations has recognised her government's 'Matir Srishti' programme and awarded it an international certificate for its community-driven initiatives.

Taking to social media, CM Banerjee said: "Proud to share that the United Nations has recognised our initiative yet again. The Food and Agriculture Organization of the UN has awarded an internationally valued certificate to us for our community initiatives in our innovative 'Matir Srishti' programme, which we had launched in 2020 in our dry western (Paschimanchal) districts."

She further said, "Now, this creative and multi-departmental concept has received UN recognition of being a worthy community initiative in the category of preservation of natural heritage and biodiversity."

The Chief Minister said that through the 'Matir Srishti' initiative, her government has crafted a unique vision that integrates strategies relating to land development, irrigation and panchayat-level implementation.

"The vision has been to make barren, non-arable, dry, mono-crop lands finally fertile and cultivable for growing multiple crops, including horticulture and vegetable cultivation. Additional irrigation support has been created by developing new water bodies such as ponds and other irrigation sources. Lakhs of livelihood opportunities have been generated, and family incomes have increased manifold," she said.

Sharing a copy of the certificates received for her government's other initiatives, Banerjee said, "I am further happy to inform that the United Nations (FAO) has also recognised West Bengal's famed Gobindbhog, Tulaipanji and Kanakchur aromatic rice as food and culture heritage."

"I am sharing Certificates of Recognition received from the Director General of FAO of the United Nations," she added.

She further stated, "UN-FAO recognition of these initiatives is a prestigious honour for globally recognised good work to conserve natural heritage, biodiversity and food and culture heritage. We dedicate this recognition to our entire rural community, especially the farmers of Bengal."

It may be noted that in 2017, the West Bengal government's flagship 'Kanyashree Prakalpa' received the United Nations Public Service Award, securing first place in the global competition.

Kanyashree Prakalpa is a targeted conditional cash transfer scheme aimed at preventing child marriage and encouraging girls to continue their education in schools and other educational institutions.

In June 2017, the United Nations conferred the Public Service Award on the West Bengal government for the scheme at a ceremony held at the World Forum in The Hague, the Netherlands.

The scheme, which was conceptualised under the leadership of Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee, secured the top honour among 552 projects from 62 countries nominated for the award. A trophy and certificate were presented to Banerjee, who attended the ceremony in person.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rahul R
Great achievement for Bengal! First Kanyashree, now Matir Srishti getting UN recognition. It shows what focused governance can achieve. Hope the success is replicated nationwide.
A
Arun Y
While the recognition is welcome, the real test is on-ground impact. Are the lakhs of livelihoods created sustainable? Reports from Paschimanchal districts would give a clearer picture than certificates. Hope the benefits reach the actual farmers without middlemen.
S
Sarah B
Preserving indigenous rice varieties like Gobindbhog is so important! This is about protecting our biodiversity and food heritage. A wonderful, holistic initiative.
V
Vikram M
Integrating land development, irrigation, and panchayat-level work is the key. Top-down schemes often fail. This community-driven approach is the right model. Bengal setting an example!
K
Kavitha C
As someone from a farming family, I know how difficult it is to make dry land fertile. Creating new water bodies is crucial. This recognition is well-deserved. More power to our annadatas!

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