Business Standard

Conserve water to tide over climate change challenges: FAO

- PRESS TRUST OF INDIA Mumbai, 21 April

The country's farm sector has the wherewitha­l to sustain the vagaries of climate change and increase farm production, if water conservati­on is taken seriously, Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on (FAO) India representa­tive Shyam Khadka said on Friday.

“The good news for India is that it has well-developed agricultur­e systems. Besides, it has several agricultur­al universiti­es and even private parties are entering farm research. This has produced good results since the 1960s taking food production up five times now,” Khadka told a CII conference in Mumbai.

He further said, “the country's agricultur­e has the wherewitha­l to overcome the problems of climate change and take the path of sustainabl­e and climate-smart farming by using mitigation tools, adapting technology and new crops.” Admitting that numerous agro-climatic conditions pose challenges to its manoeuvrab­ility in the wake of climate change, Khadka said the country has already identified the direction it has to take in terms of crop shifting.

Pointing out that waterinten­sive crops like sugarcane cultivatio­n is not suitable for a water-starved Maharashtr­a, he said such crops should ideally move to the Gangetic states like Bihar and Brahmaputr­a-irrigated Assam.

“Under the ‘Go East’ policy of government, the focus will be on Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, Chhattisga­rh, Assam and Odisha. It is just that it has to be implemente­d on the ground,” he said.

Highlighti­ng worsening water scarcity in recent years, he said Punjab is guzzling 6 billion cubic meters of water annually, taking the ground water levels from 125 ft to over 400 ft now. Centrifuga­l pumps are obsolete today and only submersibl­e pumps can come to the rescue.

The world population will rise to 9 billion by 2050, from 7 billion now. This will double the food supply needs, Tata Sons sustainabi­lity group head Shankar Venkateswa­ran told the conference. He also said the world has to double food production by 2050 to feed teeming billions.

 ??  ?? Water-intensive crops like sugarcane cultivatio­n is not suitable for a water-starved Maharashtr­a. Such crops should ideally move to the Gangetic states like Bihar and Brahmaputr­airrigated Assam
Water-intensive crops like sugarcane cultivatio­n is not suitable for a water-starved Maharashtr­a. Such crops should ideally move to the Gangetic states like Bihar and Brahmaputr­airrigated Assam

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