Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Farmers fear delay will lead to fall in yield

- Gurpreet Singh Nibber gurpreet.nibber@hindustant­ims.com ■

CHANDIGARH: The Punjab government’s directive asking state farmers to postpone paddy transplant­ation by five days from June 15 to 20 has not gone down well with the growers.

“There are no short-duration varieties for paddy.we apprehend that if sowing is delayed as mandated by the government, there will be problem at the ripening stage. In October, night temperatur­es fall drasticall­y and it would lead to fall in yield,” said Nek Singh, a paddy grower of Khokh village near Patiala.

Who would compensate for the reduction in yield, he asked.

On the other hand, Punjab Pollution Control Board (PPCB) chairman Kahan Singh Pannu, who recommende­d to the government the postponeme­nt of paddy transplant­ation, said farmers’ fear was unfounded.

“Instead, we will save 24 lakh million litres of water, which farmers would have otherwise pumped out through 14 lakh tubewells in five days,” he said.

As per the figures of the Commission For Agricultur­e Costs And Prices, central body for fixation of minimum support prices, a kg of rice guzzles 3,367 litres of water. From 1,000 kg of paddy 666 kg of rice is shelled.

Pannu said, “The undergroun­d water crisis was deepening, as every year the water level is falling by 70 cm and farmers are well aware of it.”

He added, “Any new decision of the government takes time to be implemente­d.”

However, Balbir Singh Rajewal, president of a faction of Bharatiya Kisan Union, said the paddy variety PUSA 44 grown by majority of farmers in state takes 130 days to ripen. “If transplant­ed on June 20, the harvest will be delayed till late October when the climate for the crop is not appropriat­e. The farmers worry that the yield would fall drasticall­y.”

Punjab Agricultur­al University vice-chancellor (V-C) BS Dhillon said the university has developed two short-duration, less water-consuming varieties. “One of them is PR 126 which has four-week shorter growing span than PUSA 44. The other is PR 121 that has two-week shorter span than the commonly grown variety.” Dhillon asked farmers to shift to new varieties as peak yield period of PUSA 44 variety was over. PUSA is a crop of 130 days. “I think V-C saab need to be told that commission agents and state procuremen­t agencies don’t accept PR varieties,” said Rajewal.

GOVT HAS ASKED GROWERS TO POSTPONE TRANSPLANT­ATION BY FIVE DAYS FROM JUNE 15 TO 20; PAU VC SAYS FEAR UNFOUNDED

‘TRANSPLANT­ATION TO BE PUSHED TO JULY 1’

The ultimate goal of the agricultur­al experts and the farm bodies is to push paddy transplant­ation to July 1, with the idea to conserve water. “We are working on that, and will ultimately implement it,” said Dhillon.

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