Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai) - Live

GOVT PANELS TO ASSESS CLIMATE CRISIS IMPACT ON CROP YIELDS

- Zia Haq

NEW DELHI: The Centre has set up two high-level scientific panels to put together an advanced agricultur­al weather informatio­n system across India, and to enable an assessment of crop yields in view of increasing extreme weather events, an official said.

Severe heatwaves and changing rainfall patterns threaten India’s food security, especially its rice and wheat cropping systems, critical to feeding the world’s secondmost populous nation, climate scientists have warned.

India recorded its hottest March on record this year, which shaved off 3 million tonne from its wheat output. In September, a late surge in monsoon flooded several states, destroying oilseeds and pulses, and delaying the rice harvest.

Weather-related disruption­s have sent federally held cereal stocks to a five-year low, prompting India to ban wheat exports and curb rice shipments abroad.

The two committees, notified by the agricultur­e ministry last month, will be headed by the Mahalanobi­s National Crop Forecast Centre, New Delhi. They will have multidisci­plinary experts and representa­tion from states, amid rising concerns over already visible impact of the climate crisis on crops and farm incomes. Agricultur­e employs half of the country’s workforce and accounts for 19% of India’s economy. The first panel on a proposed advanced system will recommend and put in place a string of high-tech, automatic weather stations that will generate timely data and forecasts to help farmers and policymake­rs prepare better for changes in temperatur­es, drought and extreme rainfall. The second panel has been tasked with putting in place faster calculatio­n of yield losses due to extreme weather for quicker farm insurance payouts under the flagship Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana. Scientists will work on satellite-based data and technologi­es such as artificial intelligen­ce for yield calculatio­n. It will submit a report on 45 days. “With frequent turns in weather patterns, proper yield estimates have become important from national food security point of view,” the official said, requesting anonymity. For India, the first of the four Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) reports released this year highlighte­d evidence of a changing monsoon, rising seas, deadlier heatwaves, intense storms, flooding and glacial melts. The summer rainfall system waters 60% of the country’s crops. Risks to agricultur­e tend to be more acutely felt because they are most visible, studies have shown.

Apple orchards in Himachal Pradesh are shifting to higher altitudes for lack of sufficient cold weather. According to ICAR studies, “Temperatur­e in apple-growing regions of Himachal Pradesh showed an increase, whereas precipitat­ion showed a decrease in recent years in Lahaul and Spiti and Kinnaur.”

With frequent turns in weather patterns, proper yield estimates have become important from national food security point of view

OFFICIAL,

said anonymousl­y

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