The Hindu - International

The long, bumpy road from ‘drone didis’ to ‘lakhpati didis’

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There was a 12day Internet shutdown [during the farmers’ protest] in the districts bordering Punjab and Haryana including Jind. While working in the fields, I need an Internet connection for the GPS signal connecting to the drone

RAM RAJI

Drone didi

Fertiliser companies have taken the lead in facilitati­ng and funding the first leg of a Central government programme that will train 1,000 women to own and operate drones for spraying pesticides. Maitri Porecha reports from Haryana, on the initial challenges of the scheme for women’s entreprene­urship

Amonth before farmers began their protest along the PunjabHary­ana border, with the police dropping tear gas shells from dronebased launchers, Ram Raji, 36, had been issued a drone and an electric autoricksh­aw by a fertilizer company. Raji and several women like her were to spray liquid pesticide over the ripening wheat crop. But when the protests broke out, the drone operator from Qila Zafargarh village in Haryana’s Jind district was disappoint­ed.

“There was a 12day Internet shutdown in the districts bordering Punjab and Haryana, including Jind. While working in the fields, I need an Internet connection for the GPS signal connecting to the drone,” she explains, standing in front of a field of wheat, and locking an acre to be sprayed on her remote control. February is a crucial month for spraying nano urea over the wheat crop, right before it flowers, and now, farmers feel it’s too late, Raji says. Each workday lost also means a loss of income.

Raji is one of the initial 1,000 drone didis selected by fertilizer companies from across India to be trained under the Central government’s Namo Drone Didi scheme to fly agricultur­al drones that will spray fertilizer­s over crops. Armed with a pilot’s licence from the Directorat­e General of Civil Aviation (DGCA), they are meant to be seen as changemake­rs.

In November last year, Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced the decision to engage 15,000 women from rural selfhelp groups (SHGs), at an outlay of ₹1,261 crore, to cover the cost of drones and battery sets. This amount has not yet been spent, says a Central government official working closely with the scheme.

Over two months after the announceme­nt, PM Modi interacted with the first 1,000 drone didis on March 11. However, officials say exact modalities and the future road map are still unclear. “The government has planned for another 6,000 drone didis to be trained in 202425, and another 8,000 in 202526,” the official says.

Costs to companies

The official adds that the cost of training the first batch of drone didis, equipping them with the drone and its components (four battery sets, a generator), and an electric autoricksh­aw is being borne by fertilizer companies like Indian Farmers Fertiliser Cooperativ­e Limited (IFFCO) and Coromandel Internatio­nal Limited (CIL).

“IFFCO is supporting training and supply of equipment worth ₹42 crore at the rate of ₹14 lakh per woman, including the electric autoricksh­aw for 300 drone didis, while CIL is supporting another 200,” the official adds. IFFCO has cited this expense as “benefits to farmers” in its books.

Among other companies that have assured a joint supply of 500 additional drones are Krishak Bharati Cooperativ­e (KRIBHCO), Indian Potash Limited (IPL), Matix, Indorama India Private Limited, Brahmaputr­a Valley Fertilizer Corporatio­n Limited, and the publicsect­or National Fertilizer­s Limited.

“The cost for each set of equipment (including a drone, four battery sets, a generator; excluding the electric autoricksh­aw) is ₹10 lakh, of which the Ministry of Agricultur­e and Farmers Welfare has agreed to fund up to ₹8 lakh, while ₹2 lakh will have to be arranged by the SHG,” says the official, referring to the drone didis who will be trained after the first batch.

Influencer marketing

The Haryana government will foot the bill for the service provided by the drone didis, promising them ₹400 for every acre sprayed. No other State has offered this. “In Punjab, Uttar Pradesh, Andhra Pradesh, and Telangana, farmers must spend their own money for spraying,” the Central government official says.

Raji was given a target of 257 acres in Julana block over two months. Her counterpar­t, Kavita Dhull, 35, in Rohtak district, had a target of 800 acres, of the 4,000 acres to be covered exclusivel­y by drone didis out of the total two lakh acres.

However, in 40 days of work, between January 14 and February 25, Raji has been able to cover only 180 acres, averaging 4.5 acres per day, where she was supposed to cover six to eight acres every day. She is helped by her brotherinl­aw, who drives the electric autoricksh­aw and assists her in operating the drone. “We are incurring EV charging costs and labour costs and are spending from our own pockets. We hope the promised reimbursem­ent comes through in March,” Raji says.

The Drone Didi project is a subset of the Centre’s Lakhpati Didi programme, for women from SHGs to earn an annual household income of ₹1 lakh. The aim is for the women to be influencers at home and in their communitie­s, shifting the focus from social and financial inclusion to entreprene­urial success. The Prime Minister, through his Sunday radio broadcast,

Mann Ki Baat, often refers to ‘lakhpati didis’. The term also found mention in Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman’s Budget speech this year, and appears in government advertisem­ents.

Farmer trials

To encourage farmers to apply to get their crops sprayed via drones, Haryana’s Agricultur­e Department, along with fertilizer companies, announced enrolment through the online portal, Meri Fasal Mera Byora. Farmers would also get a 1litre nano urea bottle at ₹100, instead of the ₹225 marked on the bottle, and a drone didi would visit the fields for spraying. One bottle, mixed in 10 litres of water, serves an acre.

Kuldip Singh Hooda, 40, is among a minority of 1,000odd farmers in Dhamar village, Rohtak district, who has a substantia­l landholdin­g of 15 acres. Most others own land between two and four acres. “I had registered to get 15 acres sprayed. However, the drone didi who came sprayed six acres and said she didn’t have the time to do the rest. No one came again to spray the other nine acres,” he says.

Farmers in Haryana had a difficult 2023. Their rice crops were destroyed due to heavier than usual rain during the monsoon, between July and August. “Half our annual income has been washed away,” says Manjit Hooda, another farmer from Dhamar village. Manjit says he had tried registerin­g on the portal, but his applicatio­n did not go through; no one contacted him either.

For farmers to avail themselves of the subsidy, their farm will have to fall under the earmarked acreage allotted to drone didis, or else they will have to shell out ₹400 per acre. Many who are debtridden or those with small landholdin­gs prefer to do the job manually, themselves or through lessexpens­ive hired labour.

Traditiona­lly, farmers procure granular urea in sacks, each sack of 50 kg at a subsidised rate of ₹268. Labour costs for manual applicatio­n is between ₹80 and ₹100 per acre, making the cost of fertilizer purchase and applicatio­n no more than ₹368 per acre. If they choose to use the waterbased medicine through spray cans, the applicatio­n is still ₹200 per acre, half of what the drone

didis charge. “Drones then will only be useful on large plantation­s like that of coffee, tea, or sugarcane, to make it costeffective,” the government official says.

“A big landowner can afford drones, but there are only five to 10 such rich farmers in the village,” says Harinder Singh, in his mid40s, who owns two acres and farms on another 17 acres leased out from another landowner. “I don’t have enough money to build my own house, buy a tractor, or send my children to a good school. What use are drones for me?” he says.

The women’s challenges

Dhull makes her way down a bumpy kuccha road of Dhamar village along with her assistant, who drives the electric autoricksh­aw, and then helps her unload the heavy metal box that contains the 25kg drone.

“I cannot venture into the fields alone, because of safety concerns. I need a helper who can drive the EV. The vehicle does not easily reverse, and has even toppled over. The drone weighs nearly 30 kg after being loaded with fertilizer and water. It takes two people to lug it around,” Dhull says. She pays her assistant ₹15,000 a month. “There is no provision for helpers in the scheme,” she says.

As soon as she covers three acres, she exhausts one charged battery set needed to fire up the drone. She simultaneo­usly charges another set in her EV to cover more ground. Dhull ends up charging four battery sets each day to finish her day’s work on the field. “I spend nearly ₹500 to ₹600 each day on fuel to run the generator that charges the battery sets.” She isn’t sure how the job will work out economical­ly in the long run.

On paper though, the earnings are large: if each drone didi covers 20 acres a day for 200 days, her earnings, at ₹300 to ₹400 per acre, will be ₹12₹16 lakh per year.

Push for pesticide

India uses 3.5 lakh metric tonnes (MT), or 65 crore bags, of granular urea annually, of which 2.95 lakh MT is met with domestic production, while the remainder is imported. The Central government then extends ₹2.45 lakh crore in subsidy to make granular urea bags affordable for farmers. Only 7.42 crore bottles of liquid nano urea have been manufactur­ed in the last two years. Manufactur­ing liquid nano urea costs ₹225 per bottle, while granular urea costs ₹2,000.

“Our vision is to augment the capacity of nano urea production to 48.5 crore bottles annually by 202627, so that we can reduce our dependence on the import of expensive granular urea,” the government official explains. However, liquid nano urea (which is sprayed by drones or by the knapsack method) cannot completely replace traditiona­l granular urea, as farms need fertilizer­s thrice in every crop cycle. Liquid can be sprayed only once, as only granular urea is effective at the sowing stage, and a fertilizer can only be used at the roots once the flowering begins, they add.

Many questions remain to be answered. “For instance, who will have the ownership of the drone? Will it be with the individual, the SHG she belongs to, the village organisati­on (VO) under which the SHG comes, or the cluster level federation (CLF) that consists of many village organisati­ons?” says a source working in the Namo Drone Didi implementa­tion committee. Again, there isn’t clarity around future earnings. Will the money be the woman’s or will some of it flow to the SHG, VO, or CLF?

Last year, the Agricultur­e Ministry had floated a proposal for procuring 300 drones under Krishi Vigyan Kendras (KVKs), centres attached to agricultur­al universiti­es that conduct research. “While some KVKs are using drones, others are not. Before announcing another dronerelat­ed scheme, it would have been important to understand the learnings of KVKs while using drones,” an official from the Agricultur­e Ministry added. “Also, farmers are free to buy their own drones, so imagine if a few farmers band together to buy their drone, it will eat into the business of drone

didis,” the official adds.

Meanwhile, Dhull has sprayed nearly 600 acres in Rohtak, and is now waiting for her money to be reimbursed by the Haryana government for her services. Now that the wheat is flowering, there is a lull in work for two months. “Let’s see when we will get paid,” she says.

 ?? R.V. MOORTHY ?? Drone operator Kavita Dhull in Rohtak, Haryana.
R.V. MOORTHY Drone operator Kavita Dhull in Rohtak, Haryana.
 ?? R.V. MOORTHY ?? Drone operator Ram Raji at Qila Zafargarh village, Jind district, Haryana.
R.V. MOORTHY Drone operator Ram Raji at Qila Zafargarh village, Jind district, Haryana.

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