Hindustan Times (Patiala)

HP agri dept pegs loss to rabi crops at ₹207 crore

Hopeful that the dry spell will end soon considerin­g the weather forecast, says special secy, revenue

- Gaurav Bisht gaurav.bisht@htlive.com

SHIMLA: At the time when a prolonged dry spell coupled with soaring mercury across the country has triggered an unpreceden­ted heatwave, the arid climatic conditions prevailing in Himachal Pradesh have caused extensive damage to the rabi crops.

The agricultur­e department has estimated the losses to the rabi crops at more than ₹207 crore. In March and April, the hill state recorded a rain deficit of over 90% and 89%, which is the highest in the last two decades. There were numerous western disturbanc­es, but they only brought scanty rains.

Wheat crop hit worst

As per the data obtained from the agricultur­e department, the dry spell affected crops on 86,556.60 hectares out of 4,13,057 hectares under cultivatio­n. The wheat crop was the worst-hit with losses estimated at ₹121.31 crore. Wheat is grown on 76,556 hectares of which, crop on 46,960 hectares area was damaged (more than 33%).

The cumulative loss of rabi foodgrain crops has been estimated at ₹128.12 crore. Barely, rabi pulses and gram losses were to the tune of ₹4.06 crore, ₹2.5 crore, and ₹22.77 lakh, respective­ly. The damage to the vegetables and oilseeds was estimated to be more than ₹79 crore with around 7,000 hectares out of the total cultivatio­n area of 45,813 hectares affected.

Sirmaur district has reported the maximum losses amounting to ₹61.84 crore followed by ₹54.72-crore losses in Hamirpur. In Shimla, crops worth ₹37.62 have been damaged.

Agricultur­e is the primary occupation of 89.96% of the state population. Agricultur­e and horticultu­re provide direct employment to around 70% of the total workers in Himachal. Agricultur­e in HP comprises 13.62% of the state income. Of the total geographic­al area of the state (55.67 lakh hectares), the operationa­l landholdin­g of 9.44 lakh hectares is operated by 9.44 lakh farmers. Around 80% of the total cultivated area in the state is rain-fed. “If the situation remains the same, losses would compound further. But seeing the weather forecast, we are hopeful that the dry spell will end soon,” said Sudesh Mokhta, special secretary, revenue, and SDMA chairperso­n.

Fruit growers stare at losses too

The dry spell has also added to the worries of the fruit growers, who are staring at huge losses.

High temperatur­es have caused premature blooming in high-elevation orchards. The horticultu­re department has assessed the losses to be ₹28.45 crore.

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