Heavy rains may hit sugarcane crop in Maharashtra

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| Among the leading sugarcane producing areas in Maharashtra, Kolhapur's share is 12-lakh tonnes, while Sangli and Satara produce 7-lakh and 5.90-lakh tonnes respectively. |
| The area under sugarcane has also shown a decline in the current Kharif season. Till June, total area under sugarcane cultivation declined by 2.4 per cent at 4.47-million hectares as compared to 4.58 million hectare during the corresponding period last year, according to an initial report prepared on Kharif sowing by Karvy Comtrade. |
| Farmers are expected to shift from sugarcane to other remunerative crops due to the drastic fall in sugar prices in the current season ending September. |
| "Sugar prices witnessed wide fluctuations in the recent past. After scaling a high of Rs 1,400 per quintal three months ago, its prices slipped to Rs 1,100 before stabilising at Rs 1,300 per quintal," a dealer with Karvy Comtrade, J Shah, said here. |
| Record production this year at around 28-million tonnes and high carry-forward stocks for the next season is also a matter of concern for farmers, the report said. |
| Out of 185 sugar manufacturing mills, nearly 130 will still be able to get into the crushing season due to sufficient rainfall in other drought-prone areas of Maharashtra and are expected to yield about 5-6 million tonnes of finished sugar. Due to lower price realisation, Andhra Pd from turmeric to other crops like soybean and chillies. At present, around 6,000-7,000 hectares of land have been brought under turmeric, down by 30 per cent compared to last year's coverage of 10,000 hectares in Nizamabad. |
| Infact, the early on-set and severe rainfall across the coastal regions of Maharashtra, Gujarat and Andhra Pradesh has not proved beneficial to Kharif sowing this season, due to unequal distribution of rainfall. |
| India is predominantly an agrarian economy and largely depends upon the south-west monsoon for its agriculture. In agriculture terminology, the season from June to September is popularly called as Kharif, which commences with the onset of the South-west monsoon in India. |
| Kharif season contributes 60 per cent of India's agricultural production. During this period, farmers, traders and others related to the agriculture sector, closely monitor its progress and distribution through India. |
| "Even though the south-west monsoon has covered nearly 90 per cent part of India, the average under different crops is lagging when compared to last year following unequal distribution of rainfall," dealers said. |
First Published: Jul 09 2007 | 12:00 AM IST