Soil Degradation

Chemical fertilizers destroy organic matter, earthworms, and microorganisms. Soil becomes hard, loses water retention capacity, and natural fertility vanishes.

Rising Costs

Fertilizer prices constantly increase. Farmers are trapped in dependency, requiring more chemicals each year. Production costs skyrocket while yields decline.

Health Crisis

Crops grown with chemicals lack micronutrients like zinc, iron, and magnesium. Food quality declines, leading to widespread nutritional deficiencies.

Water Pollution

Nitrates and phosphates from fertilizers contaminate groundwater and rivers, causing algal blooms, oxygen depletion, and destroying aquatic biodiversity.

Ecosystem Collapse

Beneficial insects, bees, butterflies, and soil microorganisms are destroyed. Loss of biological control agents leads to increased pest infestations.

Broken Trust

Poor quality organic alternatives and misleading marketing have left farmers disillusioned. Counterfeit products destroyed confidence in organic farming.