A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, November 29, 2015
Drought-hit India's quest for water hampered by thirsty crops
A women uses a hand-pump to fill drinking water on the outskirts of Amritsar in Punjab, India, November 15, 2015.-REUTERS/MUNISH SHARMA
Pleas by local officials for farmers to switch from rice to oilseeds and
pulses and protect dangerously low water levels are falling on deaf
ears, and may be further undermined by government policies encouraging
cultivation of thirsty crops.
Back-to-back droughts for the first time in nearly 30 years mean some
rural areas in the north are running out of water for human consumption
and agriculture, prompting warnings of serious consequences if urgent
action is not taken.
"It is unlikely that India will have another drought next year; three
years in a row has never happened before," said Ashok Gulati, a farm
economist who advised the last government.
"But with extreme events increasing due to climate change, you never
know. If we don't wake up now then, God forbid, people will leave
farming to become labourers at railways stations."
With more than two-thirds of the 1.25 billion population living off the
land, water scarcity could affect the majority and hit long term food
supplies.
As world leaders meet in Paris next week to agree a deal on cutting
greenhouse gas emissions, India says climate change is already hurting
the agriculture and water sectors, and the impact is amplified by
poverty and a heavy reliance on farming.
Locally, officials are trying to change farming habits and enforce stricter rules on water usage.
"We are encouraging crop diversification; we are going for pulses," said
Amit Kishore, chief development officer in Rampur, a farm belt city in
Uttar Pradesh.
"We have been trying to convince farmers to shift to horticulture as well, but the uptake has not been satisfactory."
Four out of Rampur's six administrative areas are so-called "dark
zones", with 80 percent or more of groundwater exhausted. In those
zones, the practice of boring wells has been banned this fiscal year.
Without urgent action, the region risks going the way of Punjab and
Haryana, two parched states where the groundwater has sunk even further.
Some farmers in those states now need to dig 300 feet (91 metres) for
water, compared to five feet (1.5 metres) in the 1960s, according to
research by a local government scientist.
"RICE SELLS"
Prime Minister Narendra Modi has urged farmers to use water wisely,
advocating a "per drop, more crop" approach that includes water-saving
methods like drip irrigation.
Yet his 18-month-old government has also boosted incentives to grow
water-intensive rice, wheat and sugarcane that India exports, at the
expense of crops like oilseeds or pulses that it has to import.
Little wonder some farmers in the northern farming belt are ignoring the advice of local officials.
"We grow rice because that is what sells," said Babu Ram Saini, standing
by a pond in Jiwai Jadid village in Rampur. "Productivity for lentils
is so low that we'll not be able to sustain ourselves without massive
government support," he said.
Some experts are advocating tougher measures to force more efficient use
of water. Wastage is encouraged by the supply of free or subsidized
power which boosts politicians' popularity.
"We have been trying to tell farmers that if you continue growing rice,
more places are going to become dark zones," said V.K. Mishra, a
regional head of the Central Soil Salinity Research Institute in Uttar
Pradesh's capital Lucknow.
"We should make a law that you can't grow rice in areas where the water table is very low."
Rice covers 62 percent of Punjab's area under cultivation, up from 10
percent in 1970. The expansion of rice has been similar in neighbouring
Haryana.
Though the droughts have hit crops, India still produces more rice,
wheat and sugar than it consumes, drawing accusations from the World
Trade Organization that stockpiling to provide cheap grain to the poor
unfairly distorts trade.
"It is quite natural for our farmers to go for rice and cane when both
power and water are almost free," said economist Gulati, adding that
selling such produce abroad is like exporting "precious water for free".
(Additional reporting by Mayank Bhardwaj in NEW DELHI; Editing by Mike Collett-White)