Business Standard

Map water health of farms, says farmer income panel

- SANJEEB MUKHERJEE

The official committee to recommend on the aim of doubling of farmer incomes in five years has said the soil health card scheme should be extended to the water health of farms. And, to link this with fertiliser management systems

The panel has issued released two new volumes of an intended 14-volume report. Six of these have been issued till date; there st are being prepared.

The two latest ones focus on sustainabi­lity in agricultur­e and extension services. In the earlier ones, the committee had estimated the average real income of a farmer household could rise to ~219,724 by 2022-23 from the 2015-16 base year of ~96,703, with extra public and private investment of ~6.4 lakh crore at 2011-12 prices.

For the targeted 10.4 per cent annual increase in farmers’ income from 2015-16 to 2022-23, it says additional private investment of ~1.31 lakh crore is required (at 2011-12 prices) and public investment of ~5.08 lakh crore.

Critics said a 10-plus per cent annual increase in incomes is a tall order, given that between 2002-03 and 201213, farm incomes grew yearly by 3.6 per cent.

The new volumes say to boost the nutrition in soils, pulses cultivatio­n should be promoted in a big way, to meet the nitrogen requiremen­t. And, that the model legislatio­n on groundwate­r usage that proposes statutory permission to sink new borewells, establishm­ent of protected zones around drinking water sources and other measures be immediatel­y implemente­d.

Also, re-categorisa­tion of country’s agro-climatic zones because of climate change, to develop new practices on sustainabi­lity. In like measure, a shift in cropping patterns, involving a system of more pigeon-wheat or maize-wheat instead of only rice and wheat in the Indo-Gangetic plains.

The report also called for distributi­ng carbon-credits to farmers and building droughttol­erant, photo-insensitiv­e, pest and disease resistant breeders.

On extension services, that these be promoted through c0operativ­es and farmer-producer bodies. Extension services should organise more buyerselle­r meets. They also suggest using surplus land in Krishi VigyanK end ras(KV Ks) to develop agri-business opportunit­ies for farmers .“EachKVK is in possession of about 50 acres, providing ample opportunit­y for developing these.” KVKs, numbering around 680 and run by both Centre and states, are supposed to be the frontline for extension services and are usually located in rural pockets.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India