380 likes | 1.17k Views
DEPARTMENT of AGRICULTURE MEGHALAYA. WORKSHOP on AGRICULTURE STRATEGIES, POLICIES and PRACTICES GUWAHATI 30 th September – 1 st October 2010. The State Agriculture Department. Directorate of Horticulture created in 1995
E N D
DEPARTMENT of AGRICULTURE MEGHALAYA WORKSHOP on AGRICULTURE STRATEGIES, POLICIES and PRACTICES GUWAHATI 30th September – 1st October 2010
The State Agriculture Department 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 9th Plan; 78 Watersheds during 10th Plan; 78 Watersheds during 11th Plan • 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 • 1st 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%)
TREYSEFATraining 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
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 Present Position
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
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 Horti Hubs
Hub-specialities • Thadlaskein (JH) – Gerberas, Leather leaf fern, Cattleya • Upper Shillong (EKH) – Gerberas, Orchids (cymbidiums) • Nongstoin (WKH) – Carnations • Dewlieh (RB) – Roses, Strawberries • Samgong (EGH) – Anthuriums, Bell-peppers • Rongram (WGH) – Anthuriums, Bell-peppers, Cherry-tomatoes • Minneng (SGH) – Dendrobiums, Liliums
GOI issues Technology Mission on Horticulture Subsidies • Transport • Packaging Material Due Diligence • Approved rates • Approved Firms/Suppliers Cost norms for protected cultivation – unrealistic, low Need for projectised proposals Proposal passed by SLSC modified at the Ministry level RKVY pattern of sanction