By Abhishek Waghmare A
“normal” monsoon
and
adequate
water in major reservoirs nationwide, coupled with
more money
to agriculture, have set the stage for a
record
agricultural output of 270 million tonnes — 2 percent in excess of the government’s target — for the kharif (summer) and rabi (winter) crops of 2016. With the southwest monsoon officially
withdrawing
this week, water available in 91 reservoirs nationwide is 25 percent more than the amount available in October 2015, according to Central Water Commission data, except in Karnataka and Gujarat, which face more than 20 percent deficit in seasonal rainfall. Against the government target of 132 million tonnes, India is set for a kharif output of 135 million tonnes, according to
preliminary government estimates
; the previous highest was 131 million tonnes in 2011-12. [caption id=“attachment_2129547” align=“alignleft” width=“380”]
Representational image. Reuters[/caption] It also appears India will meet the rabi
target
of 137 million tonnes, one million tonnes more than the previous high in 2013-14. A third of India’s districts were faced with deficient rainfall in the June-August period, as IndiaSpend
reported
in August 2016; it now appears that Karnataka and Gujarat will be hardest hit, according to this October 2016
report
Monsoon Granular Review by Crisil, a research agency. A “double whammy” — three-year successive years of deficient rainfall and poor irrigation facilities — makes 13 districts in the two states the worst affected in this “normal” monsoon season, the report said. Agriculture reviving, but households may suffer The four-month monsoon season ended
within normal limits
of (+/-) 4 percent of the 100-year average. The actual deficit was 3 percent — India received 97 percent of normal rainfall in the June-September period — diverging from the
prediction
of 6 percent excess rainfall forecast by the India Meteorological Department (IMD) as the monsoon began. The 91 major reservoirs monitored by the Central Water Commission are at 75 percent
capacity
, equaling the average availability of last 10 years. “The share of distressed districts in all-India kharif production is just 1.7 percent but the stress to agricultural household incomes could be high because a quarter of the kharif production in Karnataka and a third in Gujarat comes from the distressed districts,” the Crisil report
said
. Even with Uttar Pradesh, Punjab, Haryana and Kerala getting less-than-normal rains, adequate irrigation facilities will ensure that these states are not affected as much as Karnataka and Gujarat, the report said. With the exception of some districts in some states, the picture for India’s agricultural economy looks positive due to the fact that the sowing of the summer crop has
crossed the end-of-September average
sowing of 102.5 million hectare to reach 107.1 million hectare.
Source: 4th advanced estimates of agricultural production , ministry of agriculture, figures in million tonnes
Note: For 2015-16: 4th advanced estimates; for 2016 kharif: 1st advance estimate; for 2016 rabi production: set target; rest of the years: actual production.
Pulses output in the kharif season was estimated to be 8.7 million tonnes, 22 percent more than the best of 7.1 million tonnes achieved in 2010-11, and 60 percent more than last year’s 5.5 million tonnes last year. Oilseeds production is set to be 234 million tonnes, 4 percent more than the best of 226 million tonnes produced in 2013-14.
Source: All India Crop Situation as on September 30, 2016 , Ministry of Agriculture
Bordering regions have deficit, central India in excess Every monsoon — whether it good (above normal) or bad (below normal) — leaves some areas inundated and some parched. In the “normal” monsoon of 2016, eight states received less than 85 percent of normal rains. A normal monsoon in 2013 hid 30 percent and 23 percent deficits in Bihar and Jharkhand respectively. In 2016, except for central India, the other three regions — northwest, southern peninsular and eastern (including northeast) — reported deficits in June-to-September rainfall. Only four of 36 meteorological sub-divisions received more than 20 percent above normal rainfall. Drought-stricken Marathwada and the coastal strip of Konkan in Maharashtra received 22 percent and 21 percent above-normal rainfall, while two divisions of Rajasthan, west and east, received 20 percent and 32 percent above-normal rains, respectively.