Fresh Field Agro Consult & Organics Ltd

Fresh Field Agro Consult & Organics Ltd An agro allied company which offers consultancy in agriculture. Aquaculture
crop production etc

Freshly produced EM and Organic compost
07/11/2015

Freshly produced EM and Organic compost

31/10/2015

What then can you do for your community, state or country to address climate change?
First it starts with you reading this piece. All you need to do is make up your mind to effect change in your own little way and be determined to see it metamorphose. Little is much when it is done with a good intention. The sufficiency culture of his majesty the king of Thailand emphasises "small is beautiful" you should start from somewhere not despising your days of little beginning because in it, lies great strength. Little is much.

Its no longer story that all eyes are looking up to the Agricultural sector to rescue the Nigerian economy which many are finding hard to come to terms with. They ask, how possible is that? Well, you eat everyday because it is your right to. Have you ever thought of how those things you munch and enjoy daily are produced? Its time you give it some thought. If only we all can cultivate small gardens in our little backyards, sustainability and food security will be a thing of the past.
We at fresh field have decided to make a difference to address climate change by embarking on aggressive revitalisation of our depleted soil due to increased chemical activities which had from time immemorial posed a threat to human health and our environment. This is going to be achieved by producing %100 organic fertiliser and bio stimulants from available raw materials. We are going back to our roots.

31/10/2015

What is greenhouse effect?
The greenhouse effect is the process by which radiation from a planet's atmosphere warms the planet's surface to a temperature above what it would be in the absence of its atmosphere. If a planet's atmosphere contains radiatively active gases (i.e., greenhouse gases) the atmosphere radiates energy in all directions.

31/10/2015

These days, a lot of discussions are aimed at a topic which has placed a burden on the entire globe challenging almost everything.
This topic is "CLIMATE CHANGE"

What then is Climate Change?

Climate change is a long-term shift in weather conditions identified by changes in temperature, precipitation, winds, and other indicators. Climate change can involve both changes in average conditions and changes in variability, including, for example, extreme events which could either be hot or cold.

The earth's climate is naturally variable on all time scales. However, its long-term state and average temperature are regulated by the balance between incoming and outgoing energy, which determines the Earth’s energy balance. Any factor that causes a sustained change to the amount of incoming energy or the amount of outgoing energy can lead to climate change. As these factors are external to the climate system, they are referred to as ‘climate forcers’, invoking the idea that they force or push the climate towards a new long-term state – either warmer or cooler depending on the cause of change. Different factors operate on different time scales, and not all of those factors that have been responsible for changes in earth’s climate in the distant past are relevant to contemporary climate change. Factors that cause climate change can be divided into two categories ­- those related to natural processes and those related to human activity. In addition to natural causes of climate change, changes internal to the climate system, such as variations in ocean currents or atmospheric circulation, can also influence the climate for short periods of time. This natural internal climate variability is superimposed on the long-term forced climate change.

-Natural Causes
-Human Causes;and
-Short lived and long lived climate forcers

Natural Causes
The Earth’s climate can be affected by natural factors that are external to the climate system, such as changes in volcanic activity, solar output, and the Earth's orbit around the Sun. Of these, the two factors relevant on timescales of contemporary climate change are changes in volcanic activity and changes in solar radiation. In terms of the Earth’s energy balance, these factors primarily influence the amount of incoming energy. Volcanic eruptions are episodic and have relatively short-term effects on climate. Changes in solar irradiance have contributed to climate trends over the past century but since the Industrial Revolution, the effect of additions of greenhouse gases to the atmosphere has been about ten times that of changes in the Sun’s output.

Human Causes
Climate change can also be caused by human activities, such as the burning of fossil fuels and the conversion of land for forestry and agriculture. Since the beginning of the Industrial Revolution, these human influences on the climate system have increased substantially. In addition to other environmental impacts, these activities change the land surface and emit various substances to the atmosphere. These in turn can influence both the amount of incoming energy and the amount of outgoing energy and can have both warming and cooling effects on the climate. The dominant product of fossil fuel combustion is carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas. The overall effect of human activities since the Industrial Revolution has been a warming effect, driven primarily by emissions of carbon dioxide and enhanced by emissions of other greenhouse gases.

The build-up of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere has led to an enhancement of the natural greenhouse effect. It is this human-induced enhancement of the greenhouse effect that is of concern because ongoing emissions of greenhouse gases have the potential to warm the planet to levels that have never been experienced in the history of human civilization. Such climate change could have far-reaching and/or unpredictable environmental, social, and economic consequences.

Short-lived and long-lived climate forcers
Carbon dioxide is the main cause of human-induced climate change. It has been emitted in vast quantities from the burning of fossil fuels and it is a very long-lived gas, which means it continues to affect the climate system during its long residence time in the atmosphere. However, fossil fuel combustion, industrial processes, agriculture, and forestry-related activities emit other substances that also act as climate forcers. Some, such as nitrous oxide, are long-lived greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide, and so contribute to long-term climate change. Other substances have shorter atmospheric lifetimes because they are removed fairly quickly from the atmosphere. Therefore, their effect on the climate system is similarly short-lived. Together, these short-lived climate forcers are responsible for a significant amount of current climate forcing from anthropogenic substances. Some short-lived climate forcers have a climate warming effect (‘positive climate forcers’) while others have a cooling effect (‘negative climate forcers’).

If atmospheric levels of short-lived climate forcers are continually replenished by ongoing emissions, these continue to exert a climate forcing. However, reducing emissions will quite quickly lead to reduced atmospheric levels of such substances. A number of short-lived climate forcers have climate warming effects and together are the most important contributors to the human enhancement of the greenhouse effect after carbon dioxide. This includes methane and tropospheric ozone – both greenhouse gases – and black carbon, a small solid particle formed from the incomplete combustion of carbon-based fuels (coal, oil and wood for example).

Other short-lived climate forcers have climate cooling effects, most notably sulphate aerosols. Fossil fuel combustion emits sulphur dioxide into the atmosphere (in addition to carbon dioxide) which then combines with water vapour to form tiny droplets (aerosols) which reflect sunlight. Sulphate aerosols remain in the atmosphere for only a few days (washing out in what is referred to as acid rain), and so do not have the same long-term effect as greenhouse gases. The cooling from sulphate aerosols in the atmosphere has, however, offset some of the warming from other substances. That is, the warming we have experienced to date would have been even larger had it not been for elevated levels of sulphate aerosols in the atmosphere.

31/10/2015

We have a passion for the philosophies behind natural agriculture; appreciating the power and significance of nature and applying those lessons to our environment. Passion is infectious. At fresh field, its simply organic. We produce 100% biofertilizer for organic farming. One may ask, why organic? Because, we are simply going back to our roots. Those times when we never bothered about the harmful effect of chemical fertiliser and sprays which posed a serious threat not just to our health but our environment.

31/10/2015

Fresh Field Agro Consult & Organics Ltd is an agro allied company duly registered in Nigeria with the corporate affairs commission. We specialise in the in organic farming ranging from organic vegetables and other food crops. We produce 100% organic fertilizer both solid organic compost(Bokashi bran) and liquid (EM 1& EM2), organic pesticides and herbicides, unbeatable agro consultancy on soil development, aquaculture both tilapia and catfish(from start "hatching" to finish(you don't have to buy fingerlings when you can hatch them yourself), organic vegetable production and handling. We also offer training and skill acquisition on various fields related to Agriculture. You can be sure to get the best of services as well as products. Interested clients can contact us via mail
[email protected]
[email protected]

Address

No. 6Kenya Street Barnawa
Kaduna

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