Summer crop area dips 3%
The area under coverage for rice is 2.8 MH so far, against 3.02 MH in the year-ago period. Area under oilseeds at present is at 1.01 MH, compared to 1.08 MH in the previous year.
Sowing area under summer crops — rice, pulses, millets and oilseeds — was down 3% on year at 6.99 million hectares (MH) on Friday, according to agriculture ministry data. The areas under rice and oilseeds (groundnut, sunflower and sesame) have declined by 7% on year.
The area under coverage for rice is 2.8 MH so far, against 3.02 MH in the year-ago period. Area under oilseeds at present is at 1.01 MH, compared to 1.08 MH in the previous year.
Area under pulses, including green gram (moong) and black gram, rose by 3% to 1.98 MH from 1.9 MH, and that under millets and coarse cereals by 3% to 1.19 MH, from 1.15 MH a year ago.
Summer crops are grown during March-June in areas with assured irrigation facilities. Crops are harvested in June and subsequently, sowing of kharif crops commences.
Meanwhile, the government recently set a marginally higher target of 332 million tonne (MT) for foodgrain production during the 2023-24 crop year (July-June), against the estimated output of 323.5 MT in the current crop year.
The higher target for foodgrains — paddy, wheat, pulses, oilseeds and coarse cereals is despite the possibility of a deficient monsoon due to likely El Nino conditions developing during the later part of the monsoon.
The India Meteorological Department (IMD) last month had predicted that southwest monsoon rainfall during June-September is likely to be in the ‘normal’ range at 96% of the benchmark long-period average (LPA).
Rainfall between 96% and 104% of the LPA is considered ‘normal’. IMD will provide the updated forecast on the monsoon rains later this month.
If the IMD’s prediction holds true, the country would receive ‘normal’ or ‘above normal’ rainfall for five consecutive years. This is expected to give a boost to sowing of kharif crops — paddy, tur, soybean and cotton — while also ensuring adequate soil moisture for rabi crops like wheat, mustard and chana.
Another positive factor is that the 146 reservoirs in the country now have water levels at a comfortable 24% above the 10-year average, according to latest Central Water Commission data.