1 / 23

Crop Insurance As Risk Mitigation Tool in Agriculture

Crop Insurance As Risk Mitigation Tool in Agriculture. Small Sized Holdings and Low Value Crop: the Case of Index Insurance 27 th September 2012, Brussels. Kolli N Rao Agriculture Insurance Company of India (AIC). OVERVIEW. Indian Agriculture Agriculture Risks Crop Insurance: Evolution

balin
Télécharger la présentation

Crop Insurance As Risk Mitigation Tool in Agriculture

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Crop Insurance As Risk Mitigation Tool in Agriculture Small Sized Holdings and Low Value Crop: the Case of Index Insurance 27th September 2012, Brussels Kolli N Rao Agriculture Insurance Company of India (AIC)

  2. OVERVIEW Indian Agriculture Agriculture Risks Crop Insurance: Evolution Crop Insurance: Why Index insurance? Crop Insurance: Key Products Crop Insurance: How Products work? Crop Insurance: Key Characteristics Crop Insurance: Key Challenges Crop Insurance: New Initiatives 1

  3. Indian Agriculture 2

  4. 1.2 billion population 120 million farm holdings 80% farmers own less than two hectares 61% of rural households are farming households 145 million hectares of cultivated land 190 million hectares of gross cropped area 1.2 Hectare Average Farm-holding size 50% of area under cereals and millets 52% of the employment provided 69% of population is sustained Subsistence agriculture dominates Agrl. GDP estimated at US $ 285 billions (FAO, 2010) Indian Agriculture: Salient Features 3

  5. Agriculture Risks 4

  6. Rainfall Variability • Rainfall variability is dominant due to the presence of the Monsoon (seasonal winds blowing from the Indian Ocean and Arabian Sea in the southwest bringing heavy rainfall) • Monsoons contribute 78% India’s annual rainfall - undergoes wide inter annual variations • Large variations in rainfall distribution (<10cm in western desert to >1000cm in northeast) • Disparity in the rainfall distribution is so great – droughts and floods occur at different parts of the country at the same period and in the same place at different periods • One - third of the country is mostly under threat of drought • One - sixth of the country prone to floods

  7. Crop Insurance: History India 6

  8. J S Chakravarthi proposed ‘Drought Insurance’ based on rainfall index in 1920 First ever crop insurance started in 1972 for H-4 cotton based on ‘individual farm’ In 1979 a pilot insurance was introduced based on ‘homogenous area’ based yield index (Pilot Crop Insurance Scheme – PCIS) In 1985 the PCIS was converted into a country-wide ‘yield index’ based crop insurance covering cereals, millets, pulses and oilseeds (Comprehensive Crop Insurance Scheme – CCIS) Scope of CCIS expanded in 1999 as National Agricultural Insurance Scheme – NAIS Pilot Farm Income Insurance Scheme(FIIS) Weather Based Crop Insurance Scheme – WBCIS was introduced from 2007 Modified NAIS as pilot in 50 Districts from Rabi 2010-11 season Evolution of Crop Insurance 7

  9. Non availability of past record of Yields, Land surveys, Ownership and Tenancy Large number of Farm-holdings (nearly 120 million) Small size of farm-holdings (Average size of 1.2 hectare) Remoteness & inaccessibility of Farm-holdings Low value per unit Large variety of crops, varied agro-climatic conditions and package of practices Difficulty in collection of small amount of premium from large number of farmers Simultaneous harvesting of crops all over the country Prohibitive cost of Manpower and Infrastructure Why India Needed Index Based Crop Insurance?

  10. National Agricultural Insurance Scheme [NAIS](Government’s flagship Yield index Crop Insurance Program) Introduced in 1999 and presently in operation countrywide Homogenous Area approach and Area-Yield Guarantee Available to all Farmers - compulsory for borrowing & optional for non-borrowing Covers Food crops, Oilseeds & Annual Commercial / Horticultural Crops Indemnity levels vary from 60% to 90% of past average yield Sum Insured - Loan amount to 150% of value of Yield Premium rates Food crops & Oilseeds – ranges from 1.5% to 3.5% Annual Commercial / Horticultural Crops – Actuarial Indemnities exceeding Premium for food crops & oilseeds are borne by the Government Being Implemented in 25 States & 2 Union Territories Covers more than 35 different crops each during Kharif and Rabi 9

  11. NAIS: How it Works?

  12. Weather Index Crop Insurance Government providing support since 2007 Indemnifies farmers against deemed crop losses due to adverse weather incidence Crops covered include perennial & horticulture crops like mango, apple, cashew, grapes & orange Risk based Premium rates with upfront premium subsidy from government Payouts based on pre-defined triggers on specified weather parameters Weather Parameters Rainfall: Deficit rainfall, Excess rainfall, Consecutive Dry/ Wet Days , Number of rainy days Temperature: Maximum Temperature (heat), Minimum Temperature (frost), Mean temperature, daily chilling units Relative Humidity Wind : Speed Disease proxy: Combination of rainfall, temperature & humidity 11

  13. Pilot WBCIS

  14. Modified Yield Index Insurance 13

  15. Modified NAIS: How it Works?

  16. Index Based Crop InsuranceProgress: 2011-12

  17. Crop Insurance: Key Characteristics India 16

  18. Key Features of Implementation Credit linkage, and mandatory for borrowing farmers Risk covered is based n production cost (safety-net) Credit institutions also finance the premium (in addition to crop loan) Insurance acts as collateral, and lending agencies have the first lien on claim Minimal distribution costs Claims process is automated Yield estimation is done by the provincial government agencies , and based on ‘single series’ Weather product uses crop modeling inputs Weather data comes from both public as well as private data providers Extension activities and awareness programs are also organized by the government Private insurance providers are allowed for actuarially priced programs, and enjoy same level of support as AIC Government provides for about 2/3rd cot of the program 17

  19. Key Challenges Basis risk Issues of financial literacy Un-realistic expectation– high frequency payouts to sustain interest Crop Insurance Vs Other Subsidy programs Technically Complex Products (weather index) Climate Change & Seasonal Forecasts Yield estimates prone to manipulation risk 18

  20. Some Solutions… Yield audit system Weather data standardization and integration Technical Support Unit (TSU) & product bench-marking Financial literacy and consumer education Micro-insurance agents On-line portal Information interface for stakeholders 19

  21. Crop Insurance: New Initiatives India 20

  22. New Initiatives Weather index: • Index + • Double-Trigger product • Savings linked (Loyalty Discount) based product • TOPS based weather data generation Yield index: • GPS enabled cell phones to audit yield estimation • Satellite imagery based area estimation and crop health reporting • Remote Sensing based Information and Insurance for Crops in Emerging Economies (RIICE)

  23. नमस्कारम 22 22

More Related