Shubhendu Sharma: The Man Who Has Made Forests A Reality Again.
Shubhendu Sharma: The Man Who Has Made Forests A Reality Again:
If studies are to be believed, then the world loses forests equivalent to 36 football fields every minute. Natural resources and fresh air is depleting at a much higher rate now, with the fear of doomsday inching closer as we speak. The constant insurgence of floods, cyclones, and landslides is only a small reminder of the bigger worries that lay ahead.
Shubhendu Sharma left his high paying job as an engineer to plant trees for the rest of his life. Using the unique Miyawaki methodology to grow saplings, Afforestt converts any land into a self-sustainable forest in a couple of years.
He has successfully created many forests across India in two
years. Here’s how he made it possible.
Did you know that you could convert a piece of land in your
backyard into a beautiful forest within a year? Shubhendu Sharma, an Industrial
Engineer, is allowing you to bring nature home.
It all started when Sharma volunteered to assist a naturalist,
Akira Miyawaki, to cultivate a forest at the Toyota plant where he worked.
Miyawaki’s technique has managed to regenerate forests from Thailand to the
Amazon, and Sharma thought to replicate the model in India.
Sharma started to experiment with the model and came up with an Indian version after slight modifications using soil amenders. His first tryst with making forests was in his own backyard in Uttarakhand, where he grew a lush green forest within a year’s time. This gave him confidence and he decided to launch it as a full-time initiative. He quit his job and spent almost a year to do research on the methodology.
After much planning, research and enthusiasm, Sharma started Afforestt, an end-to-end service provider for creating natural, wild, maintenance-free, native forests in 2011.
Sharma, an Ashoka, TED and INK fellow was clear from the very beginning that Afforestt will be a for-profit organization. He wanted to change the industry and Afforestt was much more than just a business idea for him.
Shifting his career wasn’t easy. “Especially,
convincing the family was very tough. They could not understand why I was
bent on quitting a high-paying engineering job at Toyota to plant trees
all my life,” Sharma says.
Sharma was adamant on making his
idea work and started the company without his family’s knowledge; it was only
after a couple of months of operation they got to know about it and finally
made peace with it.
“My friends were a great support to me which gave me a boost. Till
date, they take interest and engage in the activities of Afforestt,” Sharma
says.
Having
started on his own, Sharma now has a team of that works from Bangalore and
Other Parts of India. Initial troubles with finding the market and sustaining
the business were solved to some extent when they received their first order
from a German furniture maker to plant about 10,000 trees. Since then,
Afforestt has served around many clients and planted trees.
How it works?
Afforestt works in two ways. One is
end-to-end services, where they provide complete Project Execution and Management
services which includes arrangement of labour, materials, equipment, tools and
facilities required to execute an afforestation project using the Miyawaki
Method. Another way is providing project management, on-site consulting and
software support.
The
process starts with doing a soil survey and finding out what the soil is
missing. The minimum land size should be 1,000 square feet. Then a survey is
done to study the native plant species and biomass. After the survey,
saplings are prepared in a nursery and soil is mixed with biomass to make it
more fertile.
Finally
the process of planting 50 to 100 varieties of native species at a density of
3-5/sq meter starts. The last stage involves watering and weeding the area for
next two years, after which the forest needs no maintenance and becomes
self-sustainable.
Sharma
designs and formulates in what pattern, sequence and ratio should the
saplings be planted for rapid growth. On an average, a sapling grows
approximately 1 meter every year. The biggest plus point of Afforestt is its
low-cost model. They charge around Rs. 150 per square foot, which is far less
than what a regular Miyawaki method costs.
“The biggest challenge was to launch something which had no
existing market and we didn’t even know if it ever would,” says
Sharma. Forests are something which require space, and not everyone is
open to the idea of having a forest in their backyard.
Apart from that, as this is a
one-of-its-kind initiative in India, Sharma had to do a lot of research. There
was no help available as this had never been done before.
Again,
as this was a unique model, finding clients and convincing people that it is
actually possible was again a huge task.
Afforest has created many forests
so far across cities of India and wants to increase the number. Sharma has a
lot of plans to scale up and put this technology out there for more and more
people to implement.
He
is planning to launch a monitored crowd-sourced software where people will be
able to feed their native plantation species in the tool. So, in case someone
wants to plant their own forest, they would know what all species to go for.
This will make their task a lot easier.
The biggest lesson that I have learnt is that you need to keep earning money. This is the only way you can sustain your initiative and actually bring a change,” Sharma says.
Another thing he learnt is that people are ready to pay money
only if you sell the idea well. “This should become a livelihood cycle, where a lot more people
are engaged in afforestation,” Sharma says.
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