1 / 16

ENHANCING SUSTAINABILITY OF DRY LAND RAINFED FARMING SYSTEMS

ENHANCING SUSTAINABILITY OF DRY LAND RAINFED FARMING SYSTEMS. MINISTRY OF AGRICULTURE DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE & COOPERATION CROPS DIVISION. INDIAN AGRICULTURE SCENARIO. Net Cultivated Area : 141 m ha Irrigated Area : 56 m ha (40%) Rainfed/Dryland Area : 85 m ha (60%).

omer
Télécharger la présentation

ENHANCING SUSTAINABILITY OF DRY LAND RAINFED FARMING SYSTEMS

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. ENHANCING SUSTAINABILITY OF DRY LAND RAINFED FARMING SYSTEMS MINISTRY OF AGRICULTURE DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE & COOPERATION CROPS DIVISION

  2. INDIAN AGRICULTURE SCENARIO Net Cultivated Area : 141 m ha Irrigated Area : 56 m ha (40%) Rainfed/Dryland Area : 85 m ha (60%)

  3. RAINFED FARMING AREA IN INDIA – (85 m ha) (68.5 m ha fully rainfed & 18.0 m ha partial rainfed)

  4. IMPORTANCE OF STRENGTHENING DRY LAND FARMING • 60% of cultivated area - about 85 million ha • Contributes approx. 40% of total food production • Native to many nutritious crops (Dicoccum wheat, ragi, pearl millet, pulses, oilseeds, fruits, etc.) • Successive years of deficient rainfall • No. of farm holdings affected 54.6 m

  5. SOCIO-ECONOMIC IMPACT OF NO INTERVENTION • Loss of crop • Reduced productivity and loss of income • Loss of wages to labourers & unemployment • Increased drought relief • Migration of farm labourers and farmers • High indebtedness and debt trap for farming community • Migration and loss of animal/ livestock

  6. What to do ? • Need to re-invent country’s monsoon agriculture through change in policy & approach • Target dry land areas for diversification- livestock, horticulture, silviculture, grassland, fodder in keeping with natural resource availability • Improve in-situ moisture conservation through ground water recharge • Adopt dry land farming approach- raised bed, ridge furrow, zero tillage, mulching • Integrate with multiple watershed development programmes of other agencies/Ministries

  7. UNDER IMPLEMENTATION -WATERSHED DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMMES OF • Ministry of Rural Development (DPAP, DDP, IWDP) • Ministry of Environment & Forests (IAEPS) • Ministry of Agriculture (NWDPRA, RVP,FPR, WDPSCA) • Planning Commission (Western Ghat and Hill Area Development) • NABARD (WDF)

  8. SO IS THE PROPOSED DRYLAND FARMINGSCHEME A DUPLICATION? • No • Targets individual farm holdings instead of watershed area • A multilayered response to monsoon failure / water deficiency • Watershed development along with farm improvement, address trio concerns of ecosystem, farming-livestock systems and livelihood especially for landless. • Stand alone water bodies can not achieve desired result. • Must be combined with appropriate technological support • These include water management, in-situ water conservation, on-farm generation of organic manure, alternate land use, cropping system and diversification into agri-horti-livestock.

  9. PROJECT COMPONENT • - On farm rain water management • Development of farm ponds • Well recharging • In-situ moisture conservation • Promotion of conservation tillage techniques • - Bed planting • Inter row/ plough water harvesting managemen • To integrate with other on-going projects of different Ministries/Agencies

  10. AREA OF OPERATION • CRITERIA FOR INCLUSION • Less than 750 mm rainfall • less than 30% coverage under assured irrigation, e.g.Like States of Maharashtra, Gujarat, MP., A.P., Karnataka, Rajasthan, Tamilnadu • Farm holdings in rainshadow and drought prone areas

  11. DELIVERY MECHANISM Tech support ICAR, CRIDA, CAZRI Ministry of Agriculture TECHNOLOGY FUNDS State Agriculture Department Tech support SAUs, Local ICAR Institutes DRDA District KVK/ KGK Farmer Panchayat

  12. SHARING OF SYSTEM COST • Average cost per hectare may range from Rs. 33000 to Rs. 50000 • Proposed financial assistance to farmers- 50% of unit cost • proposed sharing of system cost • - 50% by GOI • - 50% by farmers through own resources or loan from bank

  13. EXPECTED OUTCOME / IMPACT • Stabilize / enhance production in dry land areas • Assure income to individual farm families • Insulate poor and marginal farmers from weather vagaries • Restore ecological balance of natural resources • Increase biodiversity at farm level

  14. COVERAGE UNDER THE PROJECT • ( Rs. in crores) • Component 2005-06 2006-07 • ( i) In situ moisture conservation/ 565 745 • utilization • (ii) On-farm production & use of organic 45 60 • matter • (iii) Alternate land use/composite farming 180 240 • system • (iv) Capacity building and extension 90 120 • Others (monitoring& evaluation) 45 60 • Total 925 1225 Note: Average holding : 2 ha No. of holdings : 1.8 to 2.8 lakh Per holding Government support : Rs. 33000 to 50000

  15. PROPOSED FINANCIAL OUTLAY (Rs. in crores)

  16. Thank you

More Related