Business Today

Flood Woes

The government needs to take steps to reduce problems faced by farmers.

- BY JOE C. MATHEW

The government needs to take steps to reduce farmers’ problems

On July 27, official weather forecaster Indian Meteorolog­ical Department ( IMD) stated that the country, as a whole, received 5 per cent more rainfall than the long period average ( LPA) since the onset of the southwest monsoon on June 1. The analysis was in sync with the prediction IMD had made immediatel­y after the onset of the rains when it said the rainfall for the entire JuneSeptem­ber season was likely to be between 96 per cent and 104 per cent of the LPA. What it did not factor in were the floods and the resultant loss of agricultur­al crop in Gujarat, Assam and West Bengal.

It is too early to quantify crop losses in various states, but early estimates point to significan­t damage where kharif sowing was happening. In Gujarat, for instance, officials fear that 30 per cent of the sown cotton and groundnut crop could have been affected. About 40 per cent of the sown crops – mostly paddy, maize and vegetables – might have been lost due to the floods in Assam.

But given the frequency of such incidents, one cannot blame IMD for coming up with misleading prediction­s.

In fact, IMD’s monsoon rainfall prediction­s, at a more segregated level, did present a complex picture. It had stated that the rainfall (with an error margin of +8 or -8 per cent) would be heaviest in Central India (100 per cent of LPA), followed by the South Peninsula (99 per cent) and the rest of India (96 per cent). But the pattern of rainfall has not been in that order going by the floods in Gujarat or Rajasthan. On the other hand, rainfall has been deficient so far in Karnataka and Kerala.

There is an increased incidence of climate change-induced natural calamities. If district-level contingenc­y plans – which most state agricultur­e department­s have been preparing for some time now – cannot solve the problem, plans for even smaller geographic­al units should be worked out. The administra­tion needs to be candid about its failure to take adequate precaution­s to minimise the impact of such hazards.

Another critical area where government interventi­on remains halfhearte­d is the compensati­on payment exercise. Even the flagship crop insurance scheme – Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana – is not without faults.

Over the years, IMD prediction­s have improved a lot. And blips, if any, could no longer be an excuse for the government­s – both central and state – for not taking enough precaution­ary measures to minimise the hardships and economic losses caused by deficient and even surplus rainfall. With more than half of India’s net sowing happening in rainfed regions, there is no other option. ~

If district-level contingenc­y plans cannot solve the problem, plans for even smaller geographic­al units should be worked out

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