Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Enterprisi­ng cotton cultivator­s see hope in drip irrigation technique

- Vishal Joshi vishal.joshi@htlive.com

BATHINDA: Nearly 75 cotton growers of Punjab, who switched to drip irrigation in the last kharif season, see the technique as a potential gamechange­r for the agronomics of south Malwa region.

According to the soil and water conservati­on department, in 2020 about 70-hectare land under cotton cultivatio­n was brought under the micro-irrigation system in various districts.

Farmers say the technique not only saves water immensely but there was a significan­t improvemen­t in the yield of natural fibre.

A 26-year-old cotton grower, Arshdeep Singh from Bathinda’s Nandgarh Kotra village expressed his satisfacti­on with his maiden experiment with drip irrigation.

“Our area in Rampura Phul sub-division has no canal water supply whereas the groundwate­r table is depleted to 73 feet. With scarce water here, we value efforts that can conserve natural resources,” said Arshdeep.

Following his family’s approval, last year he decided to give t he highly subsidised micro-irrigation system a try on 2.5 acres of land.

“Against the average yield of 10 quintal cotton from an acre land under convention­al flood irrigation, I harvested about 14 quintals with the micro-irrigation technique, which is easy to use and has high water efficiency level,” he said.

Experts say drip irrigation saves more than 60% water than the traditiona­l method.

Maninder Pal Singh of Buladewala village said his experience in the last two kharif seasons was encouragin­g.

He had spent Rs 10,000 on the subsidised micro-irrigation system and recovered the cost due to better yield on two acres.

“The cost on seeds, fertiliser and pesticide used in micro-irrigated fields was half of that I incurred in my fields earlier under convention­al irrigation. I harvested about 14 quintal cotton in the last two seasons,” he said. Another progressiv­e farmer from Majurgarh in Fazilka district, Karamveer Jajaria said drip irrigation is an establishe­d water conservati­on technology and farmers should be incentivis­ed further by allowing enhanced canal water to promote the innovative method.

“In Abohar area, groundwate­r is saline and unfit for farm irrigation. Canal water is the only option here. Drip irrigation not only drasticall­y reduces water requiremen­t but also saves electricit­y as tubewells are run for lesser hours. This technique can change the economics of farmers with small and medium scale landholdin­gs by more field demonstrat­ions,” said Jajaria, who is using drip irrigation to cultivate cotton, maize and kinnow.

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

“Since the last two kharif seasons, farmers are being motivated to try micro-irrigation to find a solution to their chronic problem of low availabili­ty of water in the cotton-growing belt. We have planned to expand the area under micro-irrigation,” said Sharma.

harvested 14 quintals of cotton with this method against average yield of 10 quintal per acre

ARSHDEEP SINGH, Bathinda

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