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Hail threatens farmers with fourth straight crop loss

Hail threatens farmers with fourth straight crop loss

March 14, 2016 | 08:39 PM
Farmer Pakhir Singh examines his damaged wheat crop after days of heavy rain and strong wind on the outskirts of Jalandhar in Punjab yesterday.
Hail and rain have damaged ripening wheat, chickpea and rapeseed in India’s key farm belts, potentially cutting output and exposing millions of farmers to a fourth crop loss in a row. Torrential rains at the weekend lashed Punjab, Haryana and parts of Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh, states which account for the bulk of wheat output in India, the world’s biggest producer after China, flattening crops and flooding farms. Lower crop yields will cut India’s wheat output for the second straight year, depleting stocks at state warehouses. Any fall in chickpea and rapeseed production will force New Delhi to step up imports of pulses, or lentils, and vegetable oil. “It is a little early for us to know the exact extent of the damage but initial reports suggest that wheat production could drop by 5 to 7%,” R K Gupta, chief of state-run Directorate of Wheat Research, said in the northern city of Karnal, a wheat belt. If weather conditions remain favourable now, farmers will be able to salvage crops by draining water from their fields, Gupta said. But the loss could be as high as 7 to 8% if hail and heavy rains return, warned Gupta. The weather office has forecast rains from tomorrow. Indian farmers sow wheat in October and November, with harvests from end of March and April. Repeated squalls around the same time last year hit output, leaving farmers in penury and driving some to suicide. After two straight droughts in India, where more than half of farmlands lack irrigation, farmers complain of mounting debts as lower food prices in India and a rout in the global commodity market have eroded incomes. “After last year’s untimely rains, most of us have had a sense of deja vu but our worst fears have come true now. In fact most of us haven’t received compensation from the government for the loss that we suffered in February and March last year,” said Dharmendra Kumar, a farmer from Uttar Pradesh. Last month the agriculture ministry forecast India’s 2016 wheat output at 93.82mn tonnes, lower than a 94.75mn tonne target, but higher than last year’s 86.53mn tonnes. The central government yesterday sought reports from the states on crop damage, hours after Congress vice president Rahul Gandhi demanded compensation for the farmers.“I have personally spoken to the agriculture ministers of Uttar Pradesh, Punjab, Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan to assess the crop damage,” Agriculture Minister Radha Mohan Singh said.Singh said the affected states have said it would take three to four days to make an assessment.“Central teams will visit the affected areas after receiving the reports from the states and assistance will be provided on the basis of their reports,” he said.
March 14, 2016 | 08:39 PM