Title: Grain Gain
1Grain Gain
Presentation by S Viswanathan (SV) Agriculture
Consultancy Management Foundation (ACMF)
2Objective A Green Dream
- Double Foodgrain Production
- Revive the Green Revolution
- Benefits Largest Numbers
3Agriculture is an important focus area for India
- Tremendous impact on Economic growth 22 of GDP
- Nearly 60 (gt600 million) of population directly
involved in agriculture - Favorable climate all year around
- Favorable politico-economic situation
4Impacts economic growth and large proportion of
population
- Nearly 600 million Indians depend directly on
Agriculture (54) - 210 million depend on Manufacturing (19)
- 300 million depend on Services (27)
- Agriculture contributes around 22 of GDP
- Manufacturing contributes 27
- Services contributes 51 (IT services 3)
Agriculture
Manufacturing
Services
5Indias climate favorable all year around
- India well endowed with largest area of arable
land 420 million acres - Climate favorable all year around
- Farming possible round the year unlike in
Europe, China or most parts of the US, where
agricultural operations possible only for 5-6
months a year
6Favorable Politico-economic Climate
- Federal government anxious to accelerate growth
- Prime minister sets 4 farm growth. This will be
necessary to achieve a 10 GDP growth - Government interested in ensuring that growth is
sustainable and manageable - Pressure from global competition e.g. WTO
7Green Revolution in the 1960s was a great success
- The Green Revolution initiative
- From ship-to-mouth to food surplus
- Saw regional shifts based on economics and not
local consumption (e.g. Punjab state) - Foodgrain production increased from 72 million
tonnes in 1967 to 108 million tonnes in 1971 an
increase of 50 in just 4 years
8But we have not built on initial success over the
next 35 years
Production in Million Tons
- For the last 5 years, 2000-2005, food production
has remained stagnant at around 200 million
tonnes.
9In addition India has low yields compared to the
rest of the world
- Many US farms produce 60 tonnes of tomatoes per
acre compared to lt10 tonnes per acre for an
Indian farm
- Farmers in California produce 8.5 tonnes of rice
per acre compared to Indias average of lt1 tonne
per acre
10Indias lack of progress in agriculture is due to
several factors
- Fragmented, small land holdings
- Lack of agro-climatic focus
- Lack of technology and management inputs
- Fertilizer companies traditional focus on NPK at
the expense of micronutrients and soil analysis
11Lack of Agro-Climatic Focus
- Many states in India produce similar food grains
across the country (e.g. rice in West Bengal,
Punjab, Uttar Pradesh and Andhra Pradesh.) - But, agro-climatic zones vary around the country
and are conducive for specific, targeted
varieties of crops - In the US, each state has selected what is most
suitable to its endowments - States well endowed with water such has Illinois,
Indiana focus on corn and wheat - States like California and Florida focus on
horticulture, nuts, other exotic crops - Hawaii focuses on pineapples and sugarcane
12Technological and Management Inputs
- Lack of adequate scientific information is a
common problem - The Federal government owns and operates advanced
information networks to monitor weather patterns,
rainfall, soil conditions etc. - through advanced satellite mapping
- through research institutions
- Agriculture is predominantly a state subject in
India. Knowledge assimilated at the Federal
level is not fully percolating to the end farmer
13Change Focus of Fertilizer Companies
- The second Green Revolution demands attention to
soil - Soil analysis should be more comprehensive
- Done not just of N, P and K
- Sharper focus on micro-nutrients needed
14We have the Infrastructure to do this!
- Krishi Vigyan Kendras and Fertiliser companies
already have a lapse - These needed to be tailored for a close analysis
for micro-nutrients - We have the infrastructure only links missing
- India is strong in satellite imaging.
- Extensive mapping has already been done
- Missing links Interpreting these to the farmers
- Well-spread engineering and science colleges can
be trained to do this - The system of using sprawling post office network
can help - A village post office can help dispatch a sample
to the laboratory and also to deliver a report in
quick time
15What Needs to be Done
- Precision farming
- Soil analysis
- Tilling techniques
- Mechanization
- Agglomeration of land
- Three-pronged farm management strategy
- Demonstration farms
- Corporate involvement
- Infrastructure
- Governments role as facilitator
16Precision farming
- Soil analysis
- Soil needs to be tested for micronutrients lack
of nutrients, minerals to be compensated - Tilling techniques
- Till deeper instead of wider in California, land
tracts tilled up to 24 inches in India tracts
tilled up to 3 inches - Inadequate reach of nutrients, water to roots
- Increased farm mechanization
- This requires consolidation of farms / land
17Three-Pronged Farm Management Strategy
- Demonstration farms
- Tilling
- Fertilization and pest control
- Irrigation
- Total farm management
- Corporate involvement
- For management and scientific inputs
- Produce handling and distribution infrastructure
- Processing
- Marketing
18Increased Farm mechanisation Tilling deeper
itself can help a lot
- Water and the fertiliser will effectively reach
the roots - This will call for a measure of mechanisation
- Simple implements like Sechell Shank inserts and
disc ploughs can help - Of course, this will mean more demand for steel
19Looking at what this will mean to the Steel
producers
- Rural India has not been a great consumer of
Steel - Focus on simple tools and implements can
stimulate huge demand for Steel - Should generate gainful employment and help
retained skilled talent in the rural areas
20Citys dominance will diminish India will also
thrive on farm based economy
- Western Pundits predicts the rate of urbanization
can be decelerated - Doubling of farm incomes will impact massively on
the rural economy - Rural households can then spend on education,
health, insurance and a whole lot of consumer
goods - The gap between the modern India and the
traditional Bharath will be bridged.
21Case studies Pockets of farming success exist in
India
- Contract farming
- Pepsi
- ITC
- Tata Chemicals
- Increased yield using micronutrient analysis and
total farm management - Gemini Farms
22Women empowerment
Women self help group at Babrala village in the
state of Uttar Pradesh, India,
23IT in agriculture
Assisting with farm inputs and weather patterns
to market information and global prices,
computers are becoming powerful tools
24Reclaiming wasteland
Before and after pictures of land reclaimed for
farming
25Conclusion
- Imagine this scenario
- Farm output DOUBLES to 400 million tonnes
- Impacts on the rural economy
- Moderates unhealthy urbanization
- India emerges a large foodgrain producer for the
world - Replicable globally
- Better prospects for eliminating global hunger
- A second, stronger Green Revolution is possible!
26Agriculture Advantage India
Presentation by S Viswanathan (SV) Agriculture
Consultancy Management Foundation (ACMF)