The
proposal combines sustainable practices of the past with new energy efficient
technologies to shift the role of grocery stores from
rtailers of food grown far away
ICTs play an
important role in agricultural value chains, with different types of ICT having
different strengths and weaknesses when applied to particular interventions.
The impacts of ICT are diverse, and they influence market competitiveness in
different ways. However, technology should not overshadow the people and
institutions involved. While the positive impacts of ICT are being catalogued
and discussed, many rural farmers still do not have access to or the capacity
to use ICT.
It is clear the
impact of ICT in Agriculture Value Chains is diverse, and influences the market
competitiveness in different ways. Given the importance of context and the
rapid development technology, it can be difficult to determine whether the
appropriate tool now will persist in being the appropriate tool in the future.
In this section, you
can find a wide range of materials that look at key opportunities and
challenges of ICT interventions in the agricultural value chain with a special
focus on the most beneficial interventions in rural areas. http://www.kib.org.bd/https://moa.gov.bd/ https://mofl.gov.bd/
World Forestry Day has been
celebrated around the world for 30 years to remind communities of the
importance of forests and the many benefits which we gain from them. The
concept of having a World Forestry Day originated at the 23rd General Assembly
of the European Confederation of Agriculture in 1971. Later that year, the
United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation gave support to the idea
believing the event would contribute a great deal to public awareness of the
importance of forests and agreed that it should be observed every year around
the world. March 21, the autumnal equinox in the Southern Hemisphere and the
vernal equinox in the Northern Hemisphere was chosen as the day to be
celebrated offering information about the three key facets of forestry,
protection, production and recreation https://web.facebook.com/plant.a.tree.bangladesh.krishibid/
Urban agriculture is
the practice of cultivating, processing, and distributing food in or around a
village, town, or city.Urban agriculture can also involve animal husbandry,
aquaculture, agroforestry, Urban beekeeping, and horticulture. These activities
occur in peri-urban areas as well.
It's vertical because
you are trying to grow more crops on a smaller land area and this usually means
going upwards into buildings. It normally means that, instead of having a
single layer of crops over a large land area, you have stacks of crops going upwards.
It's also associated with city farming and urban farming.
Hydroculture is the growing of plants in
a soilless medium, or an aquatic based environment. Plant nutrients are
distributed via water.
The word "hydro" derives its
name from the Greek word "ύδορ" (hudor) meaning water, hence
hydroculture = water culture. Hydroculture is aquatic horticulture.
In basic hydroculture or passive
hydroponics, water and nutrients are distributed through capillary action. In
hydroponics-like hydroculture, water and nutrients are distributed by some form
of pumping mechanism.
Biogas is an all-rounder among renewable energies Bioenergy is renewable energy made available from
materials derived from biological sources. Biomass is any organic material
which has stored sunlight in the form of chemical energy. As a fuel it may
include wood, wood waste, straw, manure, sugarcane, and many other byproducts
from a variety of agricultural processes.