Scarabée Regenerative
Lebanon is experiencing economic collapse due to decades of corruption and flawed policies. As a result, the Lebanese pound has devalued by 60%, threatening food security and leaving millions unable to feed themselves. In response, many Lebanese want to grow their own food and small farmers, financially crippled by costly chemical inputs, are abandoning their fields.
The UN Human Rights Council has called for an end to conventional agriculture and a shift to regenerative agriculture. Scarabée Regenerative will offer education and training on the principles and practices of regenerative agriculture to transition and train, new and existing farmers and gardeners, helping them to create nutrient-rich soil and healthy, high-yield food without chemicals. While we will be initially tailored for Arab speaking countries, our knowledge and referral platform will be scaled and adapted for use in other developing countries.
In 2019, the Food and Agricultural Organization of the UN reported that 135 million people across the world experienced acute food insecurity and in the UN 2020 Early Warning Action Report Lebanon is listed “On Watch’ because of its economic crisis. A key culprit is the costly misuse of chemical inputs, responsible for driving farmers into debt, undermining soil health, reducing pest resilience, and poisoning groundwater as well as consumers. In the poorest regions of the country, agriculture-related activities account for up to 80% of the local GDP, but a recent study indicates that more that 100,000 hectares of land have been abandoned due to depleted soils. With less crops grown in Lebanon, expensive imported foods cater only to a wealthy minority.
Now, with 75% of the Lebanese reportedly worried about food security, a movement is expanding among citizens to grow their own food and motivating farmers to transition to cost effective practices, yet novel and accessible information in this field is scarce. By providing knowledge and skills, we will help the Lebanese help themselves.
Scarabée Regenerative will develop a regenerative agriculture website and app in English, with Arabic content. Of the 86% of Lebanese who connect to the internet, 76% use smartphones. Our primary goal is to provide easy to follow digital Arabic content on both our website and to smartphone users, who will be able to download content to use offline in fields .
Our English and Arabic knowledge platform on regenerative agriculture, will provide resources, links to other organizations, relevant studies, video tutorials, a public Q&A board for experts to share solutions and the sale of relevant products. Farmers and citizens alike can learn regenerative farming principles and practices such as: no-tillage, cover crops, multiple crop rotation, agroecology, animal integration, in-farm fertility and better low-carbon farm management.
In addition, we will provide consultations, and our partner-farm, The Green Van, will host workshops with on-site demonstrations. The Rodale Institute will assist us in special larger cases. A percentage of profits from consulting fees will be re-invested into struggling farms and our long-term goal is to develop farms in remote villages to act as demonstration examples, so we can reach and train farmers without internet access.
We want to help the Lebanese grow nutritious foods in abundance. Our webinars so far, have reached Beirut universities, agronomy engineers and the general public. Our partner, Souk el Tayeb farmer markets will spearhead our effort by encouraging their farmers to use our knowledge and referral platform. Each successful farm project will set an example, helping to convince neighboring farmers to adopt our practices and join a thriving farming community. Each example will include detailed cost-gain financial data. This will help users scale their approach and help us track an improvement return-on-investment. From farms to rooftop gardens, regenerative agriculture can benefit any scale of planting and will provide the affordable nutritious foods that are desperately needed.
The all-encompassing benefits of healthy regenerated soils are:
- Lessen input costs. Higher food yields. Farmer prosperity. Stacked enterprises.
- Chemical free food. Increased micronutrient content. Pest and disease resistance. Extreme weather resistance. Better consumer health.
- Water retention capacity. Filtered groundwater. Replenished water systems.
- Increased biodiversity. Restored ecosystems.
- Lessen CO2 gas via increasing carbon sequestration of carbon.
- Support small-scale producers with access to inputs, capital, and knowledge to improve yields while sustaining productivity of land and seas
The problem of food security in Lebanon is caused by costly degenerative agriculture practices. Using our platform, farmers, gardeners and citizens at different scales can easily adopt regenerative practices, improve their yields and revive their soils. In doing so they will feed themselves, their communities and boost their economies.
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