Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Amid pandemic, Malwa farmers experiment­ing with drip irrigation to cultivate cotton

- Vishal Joshi vishal.joshi@htlive.com

BATHINDA : Fighting against all odds amid the Covid-19 outbreak, progressiv­e farmers in Punjab’s Malwa belt are experiment­ing with drip irrigation technology for cultivatin­g cotton.

The state agricultur­e department says about 83 hectares land in various districts of the region, including the semi-arid areas of Fazilka and Bathinda, has been cultivated under the watersavin­g technique.

Supported by the state soil and water conservati­on department, the cotton growers hope that the micro-irrigation system will help them in improving their financial condition.

Fazilka, the state’s second largest cotton-growing district, has 61 hectares under drip irrigation, while farmers in Bathinda have cultivated cotton on about 4 hectares with the help of the technique.

Kanwaljit Singh, a progressiv­e from Bathinda’s Dialpura Bhai Ka village, has installed drip irrigation system for the first time on 1 acre land after getting subsidy from the soil and water conservati­on department.

“Since the soil is sandy, I have no option but to use 7 acre land for cultivatin­g cotton. Water consumptio­n in arid soil is considerab­ly high and the drip irrigation can be a solution to the problem. Depending upon the result on 1 acre land, I will cover more area under micro-irrigation the next season,” he said.

Gurditta Singh of Maan Kheda village in Mansa district said his first experience in the last kharif season was encouragin­g. His family had had spent ₹11,000 on the subsidised micro-irrigation system and they recovered the cost due to better yield in 1 acre.

“The cost on fertiliser and pesticide used in micro-irrigated fields was almost one third of that I incurred on 7 acres under convention­al irrigation. I harvested about 15 quintal cotton from 1 acre while the per acre yield from the rest was 12 quintal,” he said.

Dharminder Sharma, chief conservato­r of soil and water conservati­on, said the department has intensifie­d drip irrigation after a gap of eight years.

“Last year, farmers were motivated to test micro-irrigation to find solution to their chronic problem of low availabili­ty of water in the cotton-growing belt. This year, some farmers were motivated to try cultivatin­g cotton in Jalandhar and Tarn Taran districts with drip irrigation,” said Sharma.

State agricultur­e secretary KS Pannu said drip irrigation is an establishe­d water conservati­on technology and it is encouragin­g that farmers are exploring to adopt available technology in an innovative manner.

Pannu said farmers in other areas will be motivated to adopt the technique.

 ?? SANJEEV KUMAR/HT ?? ■ Kanwaljit Singh, a progressiv­e farmer, with the drip irrigation system at Diyalpura Bahi Ka in Bathinda.
SANJEEV KUMAR/HT ■ Kanwaljit Singh, a progressiv­e farmer, with the drip irrigation system at Diyalpura Bahi Ka in Bathinda.

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