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Paddy, groundnut main casualties of poor rain

Agriculture Ministry’s latest report states sowing areas have fallen.


Our Bureau

New Delhi, Aug. 10 The drought-like conditions, with the monsoon turning out 25 per cent below normal, has affected plantings of paddy and groundnut the most.

According to the Agriculture Ministry’s latest Crop Weather Watch Report, released here on Monday, farmers had, as on last Thursday, sown only 228.19 lakh hectares (lh) under paddy as compared to 285.94 lh during the same period of the 2008-09 kharif season.

Shortfall

The shortfall of nearly 58 lh was mainly due to progressive acreages lagging behind in Uttar Pradesh (32.92 lh versus 57.92 lh), Bihar (14.83 lh versus 28.44 lh), West Bengal (20.71 lh versus 30.44 lh), Jharkhand (2.56 lh versus 7.07 lh) and Andhra Pradesh (7.23 lh versus 9.96 lh).

Chhattisgarh (30.19 lh versus 32.68 lh), Orissa (23.88 lh versus 24.47 lh), Punjab (27.05 lh versus 27.35 lh), Assam (15.76 lh versus 16.08 lh) and Haryana (10.88 lh versus 12.10 lh) have also reported marginal area declines, while Madhya Pradesh (10.23 lh versus 10.15 lh), Maharashtra (9.54 lh versus 6.67 lh), Gujarat (5.39 lh versus 4.96 lh) and Karnataka (4.76 lh versus 4.33 lh) have shown higher acreages.

The Agriculture Ministry is, however, hopeful of regaining some lost ground. Recent good rains in Orissa and West Bengal would lead to “100 per cent normal area coverage in both States”, while even in eastern UP and Bihar, “planting will continue up to August end”, the Weather Watch Report has claimed.

Moisture stress

But even if the overall area shortfall is contained within limits, the impact of the severe moisture stress on crop yields is something that cannot be underestimated. Moreover, a significant paddy area upwards of 5 lh in the irrigated Punjab-Haryana-Western Uttar Pradesh belt has shifted this time in favour of low-yielding but high-value-fetching basmati varieties.

All this may eventually be reflected in the total kharif rice production, which, after last year’s record 84.58 million tonnes (mt), could end up around 20 mt lower, it is feared.

The other crop to have suffered heavily is groundnut, with farmers managing to sow only 35.72 lh, against last year’s corresponding coverage of 45.54 lh. Much of this is courtesy Andhra Pradesh, which has seen a dip in acreage, from 12.46 lh to 4.57 lh. Gujarat (17.64 lh to 16.55 lh), Karnataka (4.83 lh to 4.53 lh) and Rajasthan (3.24 lh to 3.13 lh) have also registered small shortfalls, even as Maharashtra expanded its cultivation area from 1.94 lh to 2.49 lh.

Notable increase

Most other crops – from coarse cereals to pulses and cotton – have witnessed increased sowing activity this time, notwithstanding extended dry spells in three-fourths of the country.

Three crops to have shown notable acreage increases are cotton (from 79.47 lh to 92.92 lh), maize (60.47 lh to 65.02 lh) and soyabean (91.31 lh to 93.68 lh).

Cotton area has gone up appreciably in Maharashtra (from 24.57 lh to 32.42 lh) and Gujarat (21.72 lh to 24.74 lh), and also in Andhra Pradesh (9.98 lh to 10.26 lh), Madhya Pradesh (6.18 lh to 6.44 lh), Punjab (5.27 lh to 5.36 lh), Haryana (4.55 lh to 5.20 lh), Rajasthan (3.55 lh to 3.65 lh) and Karnataka (1.76 lh to 2.62 lh).

In maize, Karnataka (6.29 lh to 10 lh), Maharashtra (3.01 lh to 6.21 lh) and Gujarat (3.63 lh to 4.20 lh) have reported higher coverage, while declines have been reported in Rajasthan (10.38 lh to 10.14 lh), Madhya Pradesh (8.41 lh to 8.30 lh), Uttar Pradesh (8.64 lh to 7.51 lh) and Andhra Pradesh (3.75 lh to 3.65 lh).

The increase in soyabean area has come largely from Maharashtra (26.09 lh to 29.24 lh), Karnataka (1.87 lh to 2.31 lh), Andhra Pradesh (1.45 lh to 1.81 lh) and Chhattisgarh (1.21 lh to 1.27 lh), which have counterbalanced drops in Madhya Pradesh (51.42 lh to 51.02 lh) and Rajasthan (8.48 lh to 7.05 lh).

Related Stories:
‘Below normal’ monsoon may delay kharif sowing
Samba prospects reviewed
Punjab, Haryana bet on paddy despite deficient monsoons
Crop outlook dismal in AP

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