Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

40 million cows to get Aadhaarlik­e number at cost of ~50 crore

- Zia Haq zia.haq@htlive.com ▪

NEW DELHI: Just like the 12-digit Aadhaar number for every Indian, the Narendra Modi government is set to assign each of the country’s milk-producing cows a cheap, unique identity card or UID, first proposed in 2015.

Deliverabl­e targets in this year’s Union budget show Rs 50 crore for the project to cover 40 million cattle.

A dairy department official, requesting anonymity, said the agricultur­e ministry, which will implement the programme, has already acquired the UID technology that comes with a cheap, tamper-proof polyuretha­ne tag containing the cow’s biological details such as breed, age, sex, height and special body marks. Each card will cost between Rs 8 and Rs 10. Named Pashu Sanjivini, the animal UID scheme is part of a larger programme for the dairy and fisheries sectors.

These sectors are crucial if officials are to get serious on doubling farmers’ incomes by 2022, a target set by the government. Economists say this is nearly impossible from cultivatio­n alone because a majority of Indian farmers can’t achieve economy of scale as they work on small parcels of land.

In a budget speech seen as propoor, finance minister Arun Jaitley on Thursday announced a Fisheries and Aquacultur­e Infrastruc­ture Developmen­t Fund and an Animal Husbandry Infrastruc­ture Developmen­t Fund worth ₹10,000 crore. About ₹200 crore has been set aside for an artificial inseminati­on drive to improve cattle breeds, with an aim to “upgrade” the nation’s entire cattle population.

The agricultur­e ministry’s Rashtriya Gokul Mission claims that milk from indigenous cattle was healthier due to higher content of “A2 allele of beta casein”, a protein. It seeks to upgrade commonplac­e breeds using elite indigenous stocks such as Gujarat’s Gir, Rajasthan’s Sahiwal and Rathi, Deoni, Tharparkar and Red Sindhi of Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh. Both projects are part of “output” and “outcomes” targets set in the budget, which will be monitored by the NITI Aayog. India has about 45 million “in-milk”, or milch, cattle.

“Animal husbandry gets only 5.4% of the overall agricultur­al ministry budget despite livestock being the most critical sector for most marginalis­ed farmers,” Kavitha Kuruganti, a farm activist said.

In the 2017-18 budget, the government scrapped the traditiona­l distinctio­n between “plan” and “non-plan” distinctio­n of expenditur­e, switching instead to revenue and capital expenditur­e. This allowed the setting of budget “output and outcome” targets, starting last year. According to this year’s budget, the deliverabl­e target is enrolment of 40 million cattle while the outcome is a “20% increase in milk production”. In policymaki­ng parlance, output is a quantitati­ve result, while outcome refers to qualitativ­e impacts.

For artificial inseminati­on, the output target is 1.50 million sex-sorted doses to “increase availabili­ty of high genetic merit heifers”. A heifer is a cow that has not borne a calf. The overall outcome spelt out by the budget are jobs for 100,000 people, 15% increase in artificial inseminati­on and a Rs 15,000-crore jump of value in milk output.

In 2015, a government committee had recommende­d UID for cows to prevent traffickin­g following a Supreme Court direction that heard a plea to stop cattle smuggling.

According to the 2015 expert committee’s recommenda­tions, owners of cattle will be responsibl­e for registrati­on. “Registrati­on proof must be maintained by the owner of the cattle which may be transferre­d to the next owner in case a legitimate sale/ transfer takes place,” it had stated.

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