Mycorrhized Jatropha Seeds of sustainability
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| A Jatropha plant with seeds |
Jatropha curcas is being hailed the new solution for vehicular pollution. A wild shrub, it has several traits that make it a favourite with scientists, industrialists, commercial planters, and others-it grows in hostile conditions like infertile soil; is not grazed upon by animals; and yields sulphurless, non-polluting biofuel.
The plant with power
Jatropha's use for production of biofuel is an exercise
in implementing sustainable solutions. It is a non-toxic, 100% natural, biodegradable
supplement for diesel. Excited by the possibility of its wide-scale use in transport,
electrical equipment, and other machines that run on petroleum or diesel, Jatropha
is being grown in India and outside. Through decades of work, TERI has consistently
tried to innovate eco-friendly alternatives to some of the most threatening
environmental problems. TERI has initiated large-scale plantations of Jatropha,
that offer a unique advantage-the use of mycorrhiza as a natural inoculant to
initiate early flowering and fruition of this much-sought-after plant.
The crisis
It is common knowledge that air pollution and the resulting greenhouse gas emissions
have taken a toll on the health of the planet. Vehicular emissions, in particular,
have led to major environmental disaster since non-renewable fuels contain atmospheric
pollutants like nitrogen oxides, hydrocarbons, carbon monoxide, sulphur oxides,
lead, and so on. Besides, many nations in the world, including India, rely on
imports to meet their soaring fuel requirements. This dependence can be lessened
with a secure supply of fuel and, if possible, clean fuel.
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| A Jatropha nursery in Vijayawada, Andhra Pradesh |
Harvesting bodiesel
Since Jatropha is a clean substitute to diesel, T ERI has developed an unconventional
method of growing the plant faster and better. The standard seedling method
of Jatropha propagation takes two years for the plant to yield. The year-long
clonal culture raised plantations take a year for the first yield. TERI's
mycorrhiza application speeds up the process-the first yield arrives after
7 months of cultivation. Besides this, the technique also leads to higher
yield and plant biomass. TERI has produced Jatropha with mycorrhizal application
across the country and tests done on these plants revealed their significantly
high-dependence on mycorrhiza.
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On yield, 30% of the Jatropha seed gives oil (after processing or trans-esterification), and 65% is utilized in oil cakes. The cakes are rich in nitrogen and make for better organic manure. Jatropha needs minimal management and can withstand tough physical conditions like droughts, and poor, degraded soil.
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| Jatropha plaantation over a flyash dyke |
Beneficiaries
Based on its success so far, TERI has been identified by the Ministry of Rural
Development, Department of Land Resources, Government of India, to prepare
a detailed project report for the National Mission on Biodiesel. Besides collaborative
plantations, TERI is also transferring the know-how of the technology to several
corporate houses. Several leading industries have approached TERI for assistance
in the preparation of their respective DPRs (detailed project reports) and
for conducting pre-feasibility analysis of industrial ventures with Jatropha.
TERI's 'train-the-trainers' workshops on reclaiming wastelands through mycorrhized
Jatropha have enthused both resource-poor marginal farmers and industrialists.
TERI has also offered buyback arrangements to poor farming communities towards
insuring financial security.
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| Testing Jatropha's biodiesel in an Ambassador car |
The high-success rate of T ERI's mycorrhized Jatropha propagation is well established. Where conventional methods of Jatropha plantations yielded 200 kilograms per hectare, compact plantations in wastelands produced 325 kilograms per hectare of Jatropha in the first year of production.
Since there is no established 'package of practice' for the plantation of Jatropha in the country as of now, T ERI is developing the first such document. T ERI has also conducted the first-ever provincial selection trials in India (West Bengal) with mycorrhized Jatropha. The versatility of this plant, it is hoped, shall help recover wastelands that could be eventually be transformed into biofuel plantations.




