Integrated farming system refers to the integration of multiple components of agriculture in a single farm unit to enhance productivity, sustainability and resilience while optimising resource use.
Integrated Farming System (IFS)
Multi-enterprise model: crop farming + dairy + poultry + fisheries + horticulture + composting + agroforestry.
Agro Ecological approach – Biodiversity Conservation
Waste-to-wealth through nutrient and energy recycling.
Closed nutrient loop – Minimises external inputs
System-based planning: farm as an ecosystem
Benefits of IFS for small and marginal farmers
Economic Benefits
Lower input cost: Use of on-farm manure, biogas slurry and feed reduces market dependency.
Income Security – Multiple income sources reduce climate and market vulnerability. Eg- crop loss can be offset by milk/poultry/fish income.
Doubling Farmers income – Eg- paddy cultivation + fish farming + poultry in Tamil Nadu saw income rise by over 100%. (ICAR study)
Better credit worthiness: Regular income improves repayment capacity and access to formal finance.
Livelihood & Social Security
Year-round employment: Continuous work across livestock, cropping, fisheries, and horticulture.
Family labour utilisation: Eg- women and elderly in backyard poultry, dairy and nurseries
Nutrition security: Access to milk, eggs, vegetables, fruits and fish
Stable livelihood prevents rural-urban distress migration.
Women empowerment: Dairy, poultry and SHGs bring direct income to rural women.
Environmental Benefits
Improves soil health and carbon content: Organic manure + crop rotation + green manure.
Water efficiency: Eg- Pond-field-livestock integration allows reuse of water and nutrients.
Enhanced Biodiversity by offering homes for a variety of plant and animal species. Eg- Agroforestry
Reduces pollution: Minimizes chemical runoff and stubble burning through recycling.
Challenges in IFS
Small and Marginal Land Holdings (86%) restricts integration of enterprises like ponds or livestock.
High Initial Investment requirement in biogas units, sheds and fish ponds require capital.
Limited Knowledge & Skills at village level – IFS demands multi-disciplinary expertise.
Lack of Market Linkages and assured procurement channels for surplus milk, fish, vegetables
Policy Gaps – Schemes operate in silos rather than landscape-based integrated planning.
Way Forward
Promote climate and region-wise IFS models (dryland, coastal, hill).
Financial Support – low-interest loans + integrated crop-livestock insurance.
Rural Agri-Logistics Nodes under Gati Shakti Framework to develop cold chains, aggregation centers
Extension Support through Krishi Sakhis, FPOs and Agri-Startups for training and backward-forward linkages.
Raising R&D Investment to 1% of GDP
Budget 2025-26 emphasised Agriculture as the ‘first engine’ for India’s development journey. IFS can be the backbone of this journey.