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World Pulses Day 2026 - Beyond rice February 10, 2026
Food security and climate resilience rely on simple, workable solutions such as pulses, which improve soils, diversify diets, strengthen farmer incomes, and reduce vulnerability to climate shocks.
Turning fallow fields into productive seasons
Pulses are uniquely suited to rice-fallow systems, as they require less water, enrich soils through nitrogen fixation, and fit neatly into the narrow window between rice harvest and the next planting cycle. For smallholder farmers facing rising costs and climate uncertainty, pulses are an answer.
From subsistence to surplus
More than 80 percent of the pulses produced under CRFM entered local markets, generating income while still supporting household consumption and seed saving for the next season. Producer groups strengthened market access, and pulses began to function as a reliable source of cash income during a season that had previously delivered none.
India’s focus on pulse production reflects a broader shift toward resilience and self-sufficiency, grounded in better use of land, seasons, and farmers’ knowledge. Recent investments in pulse research and advanced facilities that bring science closer to farmers’ fields, such as the Food Legume Research Platform, reinforce this direction. Along with field-based initiatives like CRFM, they demonstrate how research, extension, and policy can work in concert to deliver results at scale.
More news from: ICARDA (International Centre for Agricultural Research in Dry Areas) Website: http://www.icarda.org Published: February 10, 2026 |


Farmer in an ICARDA grasspea trial field
Lentil
Women farmers on an ICARDA field at the FLRP in Amlaha