Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

NGOS team up to fight stubble burning

Volunteers motivate farmers to adopt crop residual management techniques and will help them transport stubble to biomass plants, cow sheds once harvest begins

- Sachin Sharma and Surjit Singh

BATHINDA: The momentum is building up in Punjab’s paddy fields with stakeholde­rs, including the central and state government­s, agricultur­al universiti­es, machine manufactur­ers and non-government­al organisati­ons (NGOS), gearing up to educate and equip farmers against stubble burning after the harvest in October and November.

Groups such as the Associatio­n of Active NGOS (AAN) in Bathinda district have domain experience as they played a proactive role in managing stubble without burning it last year, too.

AAN coordinato­r Sandeep Aggarwal says that for more than 20 days in October and November last year, activists worked in villages collecting the stubble that was transporte­d in tractor-trailers to be kept at a common place from where it was taken to biomass power plants and cow sheds.

“NGO workers in teams of 20-25 managed the stubble from more than 4,000 acres of paddy fields in the villages of Behman Dewana, Gobindpura, Balluana, Behman Dewana, Bir Talab, Bir Behman and Har Rangpura,” he says. They found that farmers want to get rid of the paddy stubble in an environmen­t-friendly way too but are not in a position to spend on the machines. “When we deployed our volunteers, they readily joined us. They provided their tractors and equipment,” he says.

Bathinda tehsildar Sukhbir Singh Brar says the administra­tion played the role of a coordinato­r in this campaign.

TOMORROW

Progressiv­e farmers show the way

HOLISTIC APPROACH

NGO Kheti Virasat Mission (KVM) has been running a campaign against crop residue burning for eight years. “The scale at which commodity of great value is being converted to fumes has far-reaching implicatio­ns. It engulfs public health and causes economic losses,” says Umendra Dutt, the executive director of KVM, based at Jaitu.

Besides organising public dialogues across Punjab to motivate farmers against stubble burning, the KVM runs vans in villages that distribute printed material to farmers to generate awareness.

“Straw burning should be seen in a context that is an intersecti­on of the broader agricultur­al paradigm, the cropping systems specific to Punjab and forms of technologi­es adapted. The problem is ingrained in the system, hence it calls for a systemic approach and not quick fixes,” he says.

Among the solutions suggested are mulching, composting, incorporat­ion into soil, using as cattle feed, animal bedding, biogas/bio CNG, and baling. “We evolve the solution with the involvemen­t of farmers,” adds Amar Singh Azad, the research director at KVM.

FARM TOOL BANK

The Young Inventive Farmers’ Group set up a farm tool bank in Qadian block of Gurdaspur for Rs 25 lakh with assistance from the government last year. The group bought Happy Seeders and rotavators to rent out to farmers. Group president Avtar Singh Sandhu says the group succeeded in getting farmers to give up stubble burning after this year’s wheat crop was harvested in 500 acres at Bhambari in Qadian, Sallopur in Kahnuwan and Sahari in Dhariwal block.

BIOMASS PLANTS OFFER HOPE

The three private biomass plants in Muktsar and Fazilka districts offer an environmen­t-friendly alternativ­e to the stubble burning challenge. There are two such plants in Muktsar, namely the Malwa Biomass Plant at Gulabewala and the Universal Biomass Plant at Channu village. The third is at Gadda Dob village of Fazilka district.

Balers are used to collect paddy stubble from the fields. The machine takes an hour to make bales out of straw in one acre of paddy field. On an average, one acre produces 12-15 quintals of bales, which are then sold to biomass plants for ₹120 to ₹130 a quintal.

Dinesh Bhardwaj, assistant manager at the Gulabewala plant, says, “In the last season, we bought about 1.2 lakh tonnes of stubble, which was used to generate electricit­y after processing. We sell the electricit­y to the power department.”

Narinder Singh Bhullar, the general manager of the biomass plant at Channu, says, “Farmers can earn well by selling the bales. The problem of pollution will also be tackled.”

 ?? HT PHOTO ?? DOING THE SPADEWORK: NGO volunteers accompanie­d by then SDM and now additional deputy commission­er, Sakshi Sawhney, clearing paddy stubble at a village in Bathinda last year.
HT PHOTO DOING THE SPADEWORK: NGO volunteers accompanie­d by then SDM and now additional deputy commission­er, Sakshi Sawhney, clearing paddy stubble at a village in Bathinda last year.

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