Onion (Allium cepa L.) stands as a vital horticultural crop cultivated in over 130 countries, significantly supporting food systems, rural livelihoods, and global trade. Despite its prominence, production is hampered by low yields, high pest and disease pressure, and post-harvest losses often surpassing 30%. Extension services serve as a critical mechanism to address these bottlenecks by equipping farmers with knowledge and facilitating adoption of advanced practices such as hybrid seed use, drip irrigation, integrated nutrient management, pest and disease control, mechanization, and improved storage infrastructure. Empirical evidence shows that structured extension interventions can raise yields by 20–30%, cut pesticide and fertilizer costs by nearly 25%, and lower post-harvest losses to 10–15%, collectively boosting farm income by more than 50% over traditional systems. Effective methods include on-farm demonstrations, farmer field schools, participatory learning models, digital tools, and public-private partnerships that accelerate technology diffusion and resilience building. ICT-enabled strategies such as mobile advisories, WhatsApp-based learning groups, and decision support systems enhance timely knowledge transfer, enabling rapid response to pest outbreaks and volatile market dynamics. Comparative experiences reveal that precision farming and cooperative-based extension dominate in developed nations, while participatory and digital extension frameworks are gaining traction in developing regions to overcome institutional constraints. Beyond technical gains, extension efforts strengthen socio-economic outcomes by improving farmers’ decision-making, empowering women and smallholders, and fostering resilience against climate variability. Supportive policy environments, financial instruments, and international donor programs further drive adoption of modern onion technologies. Collectively, these interventions underscore the transformative role of extension services in raising productivity, profitability, and sustainability in onion cultivation, while advancing food security and rural development at a global level.
Priya et al. (Tue,) studied this question.