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DEPARTMENT of AGRICULTURE MEGHALAYA WORKSHOP on AGRICULTURE STRATEGIES, POLICIES and PRACTICES 30
th
GUWAHATI September – 1
st
October 2010
The State Agriculture Department
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE Directorate of Agriculture Directorate of Horticulture Directorate of Irrigation Directorate of Horticulture created in 1995 Directorate of Irrigation created in 2001 bifurcated into Water Resources Department in 2009
Progress of Agriculture Sector
• • • Ratio of cultivated area to geographical area of the State is about 15% during 2008-09 Gross Cropped area of 3.37 lakh hectares with net cropped area of 2.84 lakh hectares and area sown more than once is 0.53 lakh hectares during 2008-09 Cropping Intensity stagnating at 125%, still below all India Average of 130.5% Source: Statistical Abstract 2009, Directorate of Economics & Statistics
Policy Objectives
(Agriculture sub-sector)
• • • • • Shift to “Cluster Approach” – actual needs of farmers, concentration of resources, perceptible impact Bridging (narrowing) gap between demand (4,20,000 MT) and supply (2,00,077 MT) of Rice Water Management Watershed-based development Agri-Entrepreneurship - capacity building
Reasons for low yield in Rice production
• Popularity of local traditional varieties – preferred taste but low yield • Slow adoption of scientific farming practices - broadcasting method still in vogue • Farmers not applying complete package of practices • Land tenure system – share cropping, ownership patterns • Inadequate credit support- low CD ratio (69%) • Labour issues – availability, cost, winter planting
Strategy to increase Rice production
(Increase Productivity)
• Increase SRR (HYV, Hybrids) • Breeding varieties with acceptable taste, aroma and with higher yields – IRRI assistance • Improved cultivation practices – transplanting, SRI demonstration, prescribed package of practices • Tackling iron toxicity, acidity STRASA
Strategy to increase Rice production
(Increase Area)
• Increase area under cultivation – topography constraints; MCS, spring paddy (‘Boro’, ‘Ahu’) • Increase irrigation facilities for multiple cropping – mini check dams, STW, SWP • Mechanisation – power tillers, reapers, threshers (offset labour problems)
Irrigation/Water Management Strategy
High rainfall, high run-off
• Water-harvesting structures • Mini Irrigation Check dams • Shallow Tube Wells • Surface water pumping • Dugouts • Hydrams • Participatory water management (WUAs)
Maize
• Annual Production = 25,138 MT • Advantages – pre-kharif, kharif, pre rabi, rabi - encourage year-round cultivation STRATEGY • Increase cultivation of Maize & Pulses (Maize+Soyabean) • Cultivation in clusters • Varieties needed by Feed Mills
Micro Watersheds under NWDPRA
• • • • • • • 32 Watersheds during 9 th Watersheds during 11 th Plan; 78 Watersheds during 10 Plan th Plan; 78 Ideal focal points for convergence – BRGF, NREGA, Development Departments Need-based micro-plans – unique to each watershed Watershed committees are registered societies – easier access to funds (FI, MPLADS, SRWP, RKVY, MMA) Base for integrated farming system – livestock, fodder, crops, aquaculture Water-traps along water courses – irrigation 1 st tier agricultural development - subsequent tiers can be dovetailed
Mechanisation
• • • • • Power Tillers - increased popularity and acceptance Low level of Subsidy Rs.45,000/ Farmers difficulty in mobilising remaining amount Need to fix a floating % as subsidy Need to raise subsidy level – special consideration for NER (75%)
TREYSEFA
Training of Rural Educated Youth for Self Employment in Farm-based Activities • • • • • • Foster agricultural entrepreneurship Selection Criteria – Matriculate, possession of own or family land Subjects taught – agriculture, horticulture, animal husbandry, fisheries, accounting, civil engineering, group formation, mechanisation, soil/water conservation Duration - 5 Months; Stipend - Rs.500 per month; Seed Money Rs.10,000/ Year of inception - 2003-04 ; Youth trained – 400 Success stories – formation of crop-growers association; rentals of machineries; integrated activity
Horticulture sub-sector
……onward towards being a Fruit ‘n’ Flower State……
Policy Objectives
Consolidating traditional strengths Capitalising on emerging opportunities
Present Position
• • • • • • • • • • 2nd – ginger production 3rd – strawberries Off-season vegetables Leading producer of anthurium Emerging producer of coloured capsicum High quality ‘Lakadong’ turmeric (high % of curcumin) Tasty and juicy oranges (‘Khasi Mandarin’) Good quality cashew Orthodox, CTC, Green Tea Inherently organic by tradition
Traditional Strengths
(data for 2008-09) Crop Name
Potato Pineapple Ginger Citrus Cashew nut Turmeric
Area (Hectares)
17,690 10,523 9,283 9,368 7,599 1,959
Production (MT)
1,61,138 1,02,506 50,286 37,702 13,027 10,046
Yield (MT/Ha)
9.10
9.74
5.42
4.03
1.71
5.13
Bottlenecks and Drawbacks
• • • • • • • Planting material – poor quality, high cost of imports Post harvest losses Handling losses – rail, air Un-organised marketing – fluctuating price, multi-tiered middle-men High transport costs High cost of packaging material Processing facilities – rudimentary, low volumes
Thrust Areas
• • • • • • Upgrading Departmental Farms - quality planting material (QPM), private nurseries Tissue Culture Laboratory – large scale QPM production Post Harvest Management - Cold Chains (pre-coolers, cold rooms, reefers) Marketing – regulated markets, farmers markets, Border Haats, Look-East, Look-South, Israeli colloboration Agro-Processing and Value Addition Low volume high value crops
Promising Prospects
• • • • • Improved Technology - protected cultivation, plasticulture, green house, polyhouse, shade house, micro irrigation Floriculture – roses, anthuriums, liliums, carnations, gerberas, orchids, BOP, heliconia Exotic vegetables – bell-peppers, broccoli, cherry tomatoes Exotic fruits – strawberries, kiwis, raspberries, blue berries Organic produce - certification
Horti Hubs
• • • • • • • • Hub-and-spoke model; C2C (Concept to Completion); Buy back - PPP Centres of excellence – prescribed package of practices Experiments Training – PTC+ Development of Spokes Aggregation Storage Dispatch
Hub-specialities
Thadlaskein (JH) – Leather leaf fern, Cattleya Gerberas, Upper Shillong (EKH) – Gerberas, Orchids (cymbidiums) Nongstoin (WKH) – Carnations Dewlieh (RB) – Roses, Strawberries Samgong (EGH) – Bell-peppers Anthuriums, Rongram (WGH) – Anthuriums, Bell-peppers, Cherry-tomatoes Minneng (SGH) – Liliums Dendrobiums,
GOI issues
Technology Mission on Horticulture
• Cost norms for protected cultivation – unrealistic, low • • • Need for projectised proposals Proposal passed by SLSC modified at the Ministry level RKVY pattern of sanction
Subsidies
• • Transport Packaging Material
Due Diligence
• • Approved rates Approved Firms/Suppliers