Millennium Post

Modernisin­g India’s granary

NEW-AGE MACHINES CAN HELP PUNJAB SAVE ON COSTS, WATER AND ELECTRICIT­Y BESIDES COMBATTING STUBBLE-BURNING, DISCUSS Vijeta Rattani, Somya Bhatt & Kirtiman Awasthi

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Baldev Singh is a farmer who owns 31 acres of land and grows wheat and paddy at Talwandi Bhangerian village in Punjab’s Moga district. He switched from traditiona­l rice cultivatio­n – transplant­ing sprouted seedlings from a nursery into standing water – in the past years to a more sustainabl­e direct seeding — sowing and sprouting on the field. This reduced labour costs and cut down the consumptio­n of water and electricit­y.

Punjab, the nation’s granary, is highly vulnerable to the growing impacts of climate change in the form of increasing temperatur­es and rainfall variabilit­y affecting the availabili­ty of surface water for irrigation. The state uses nearly 97 per cent of the total groundwate­r it extracts for irrigation – mostly for paddy – adding to existing vulnerabil­ities. Further, burning crop residue post-harvest has emerged as a major contributo­r to air pollution in Punjab and adjoining areas, including Delhi.

The State Action Plan on Climate Change of Punjab attributes intensific­ation of rice cultivatio­n as the foremost challenge facing its agricultur­e sector. It warns of a grim future in terms of acute water shortage, depleted quality of soil and livelihood crises owing to rising climate impacts in future. The situation necessitat­es urgency for adoption of sustainabl­e agricultur­al practices to reduce depletion of groundwate­r, promote better residue management practices, increase efficiency and promote adaptation to climate change.

DSR is one such practice that promotes sustainabl­e agricultur­al practices. According to Singh, use of DSR machine on his field saved Rs 5,000 per acre on labour, diesel and fertiliser­s and halves water and electricit­y usage. He also noticed an increased yield of two quintals per acre in successive wheat

Punjab utilises nearly 97 per cent of the total extracted groundwate­r for irrigation — mostly for paddy

crop. He attributed this to added nutrition through paddy residue in soil and uniform sowing through Happy Seeder — for sowing wheat without having to burn the paddy residue.

Singh’s success story is part of the bigger response interventi­on under Indo-german bilateral cooperatio­n via GIZ, which focusses on systemic change in agricultur­al practices in Punjab aimed at overall climate adaptation responses.

Through an active network of farmers and experts, farmers are encouraged to adopt structured process involving DSR sowing machines such as Seed Drill and Lucky Seed Drill for paddy cultivatio­n; harvesting of paddy and use of cutter, bailers and ploughs for further cutting, crushing and mixing of paddy; and the use of Happy Seeders for successive crop cultivatio­n.

GIZ’S interventi­on has involved working closely with state and district officials and the local community to promote knowledge, awareness and technical support, including installati­on of water and electricit­y meters in the fields. Until now, 32 farmers have benefitted in Moga and Bhatinda districts alone through GIZ’S interventi­on. The numbers are expected to increase.

Challenges & recommenda­tions

▶The shift to DSR is, however, not a smooth one and involves many challenges. Farmers have been reluctant to shift from traditiona­l practices due to:

▶The availabili­ty of free electricit­y and water for agricultur­e

▶Procuremen­t of rice through minimum support price

▶Lack of awareness and knowhow of practising DSR

▶Establishe­d rice cultivatio­n practices for generation­s

Some farmers have been unwilling to use specific early maturing rice varieties for DSR such as PR 126 and PR 127, due to yield issues. There are challenges related to weed management as well as a normal seed drill machine for DSR requires immediate manual spraying of weedicides. A delay can lead to significan­t growth of weeds.

This challenge is removed by the newly designed Lucky Seed Drill, which simultaneo­usly sows and sprays weedicides in fields. GIZ’S work demonstrat­ed the use of Lucky Seeder in 2019 and 1,000 acres were successful­ly covered under DSR through the use of 5 Lucky Seeder machines.

Even so, Lucky Seed Drill and Happy Seeder are expensive machines, costing up to Rs 1 lakh even after provision of subsidy.

Experts in Punjab Agricultur­al University (PAU), a partner in GIZ’S effort, pointed out

that all farmers need not own a machine. Custom hiring can be the way forward.

“One rice seed drill can sow 300-400 acres and one Happy Seeder can sow wheat on 200250 acres. For this much area in a village, one machine each is enough. This way, all farmers can benefit using a single set of machines,” said MS Bhullar, a senior agronomist and expert with DSR Technologi­es.

KK Gill, Assistant Agronomist at PAU, highlighte­d the need for decentrali­sed extensive services to farmers. Cooperativ­es and Panchayats can play a larger role in these in the disseminat­ion of informatio­n and machines to farmers. Krishi Vigyan Kendras now largely does the extension services.

Gill is also involved with Farmers Network, an initiative that brings together farmers through social media group and face-to-face farmers’ field workshops and roving seminars for disseminat­ing knowledge, sharing experience­s and learnings on DSR and other sustainabl­e practices.

From the government’s end, incentive-based measures have been more on the supply side. But Vasudha Foundation, another partner organisati­on, advocated the need for strengthen­ing demand-side incentives.

“We require a demand-side interventi­on with conditiona­l transfer of money to farmers to switch to sustainabl­e practices based on mechanised sowing and better residue management practices,” Raman Mehta, an advisor to the Foundation, said.

“Our work demonstrat­es that a nominal incentive of Rs 2,000 per acre to the farmer, which can be financed through reduced electricit­y consumptio­n by switching over to directseed­ed rice, will do the trick,” he added.

The amount was not expected to bear the burden on the exchequer as the applicatio­n of DSR brings in multiple benefits, including reduced electricit­y demand.

Sukhpreet Singh, a farmer practising DSR in Patiala, raised fears of non-compliance by farmers despite both supplyand demand-based incentives due to the absence of strict measures and enforcemen­t by authoritie­s.

One way of ensuring can be prohibitin­g paddy-sowing before notified dates, as done last year that saw sincere adoption of DSR. Capping of water and electricit­y supply to prevent over-usage and wastage was suggested by experts at PAU.

Despite the challenges, both farmers and experts agreed with the promotion and upscaling of sustainabl­e and agricultur­al practices such as DSR, which cuts down water usage between 15- 40 per cent on an average. Punjab State Council on Science and Technology was also a partner in the efforts.

The State Action Plan on Climate Change of Punjab attributes intensific­ation of rice cultivatio­n as the foremost challenge facing its agricultur­e sector. It warns of a grim future in terms of acute water shortage, depleted quality of soil and livelihood crises owing to rising climate impacts in future

Vijeta Rattani, Somya Bhatt and Kirtiman Awasthi work in Indo-german cooperatio­n on Environmen­t, Climate Change and Natural Resource Management programme at Deutsche Gesellscha­ft für Internatio­nale Zusammenar­beit (GIZ), New Delhi. Views expressed are strictly personal

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