Rome, Italy
February 9, 2023
From sub-Saharan Africa to Europe and Latin America, the production and consumption of pulses increase the resilience of farming systems and improve lives.
Following the successful celebration of the International Year of Pulses in 2016, every 10 February the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) celebrates World Pulses Day.
This year’s theme “Pulses for a Sustainable Future” highlights how pulses — the edible seeds of leguminous plants such as beans, lentils, peas and chickpeas — are increasing the resilience of farming systems and improving lives thanks to their low water footprint, drought tolerance and resistance to climate related-disasters.
It also puts a spotlight on the global pulses sector, and how it can be a positive driver in ensuring the resilience of regional and global supply chains, enabling consumers to access nutritious foods, and contributing to the sustainable use of natural resources in the production of pulses.
“Pulses contribute in diverse ways towards the transformation of our agrifood systems, and can help us address multiple global crises,” says the FAO Director-General, QU Dongyu.
“Pulses can contribute to increasing the resilience of farming systems,” he added and “help to improve soil biodiversity, and are crucial components of multiple cropping systems.”
Indeed, as the world faces significant challenges to food and nutrition security, such as transboundary pests and diseases, conflicts, and the effects of climate change, pulses can be an important part of the response, as they are an affordable, nutrient-dense food that can be stored for a long time.
The wide benefits of pulses
Pulses create economic opportunities for smallholder farmers as they typically offer higher profit margins than cereal grains.
They aid soil fertility due to their capacity to fix nitrogen from the air, and optimize the use of synthetic fertilizers, while combating the effects of climate shocks, such as droughts or heavy rainfall. When cereals are grown after pulses in agricultural cropping systems, they can yield 1.5 tonnes more per hectare than those in monocropping systems.
Moreover, they can help mitigate climate change by increasing the soil’s ability to store carbon and by restoring poor and degraded soils.
The contribution of pulses to healthy diets is not only limited to their high protein content – two to three times the amount found in cereal grains–, or the calories and essential micronutrients they provide, but also to being low in fat and high in fibre.
Covering all dimensions of sustainability
While beans, chickpeas and peas are the most well-known and commonly consumed types of pulses, there are several other lesser-known varieties from around the world such as vetches, lupins, and Bambara beans, all beneficial for food security, nutrition, health, climate change, and biodiversity.
As pulses support all dimensions of sustainability, including them in agrifood systems is key to achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
With the help of governments, the private sector, Members and partner organizations, the public, and youth, FAO facilitates and promotes the observance of this international day and supports the production and consumption of pulses as part of sustainable agrifood systems and healthy diets.
World Pulses Day and the International Year of Millets
Since 2023 has been designated the International Year of Millets, FAO highlights that there are many linkages and synergies between pulses and millets.
Both pulses and millets contribute to food security and to diversified, nutritious and healthy diets, and have adapted to adverse climatic conditions, allowing them to grow on poor and marginal soils.
Combining millets and pulses through intercropping or crop rotation can boost sustainability and increase production and agrobiodiversity.
They can also be combined in several tasty and healthy dishes, such as millet congee, served with cooked pulses, like green lentils.