Slipping on targets

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| The bigger crime perhaps is to create the irrigation facilities and to then fail to do the necessary works that will take water to the farms. The painful fact is that a sizeable part of the expenditure on irrigation is virtually dead investment, as only a part of the created potential is being gainfully used, and even that is often in a manner that proves counter-productive because it causes water-logging and soil salinity. On paper, the country's total irrigation potential that has been exploited stands at a healthy 90 million hectares, but no more than around 55 million hectares (about 40 per cent of the net cultivated area) actually receive the benefits from this investment. As such, a large part of the country's total exploitable irrigation potential, reckoned at 140 million hectares, remains untapped. What this boils down to is that nearly 60 per cent the country's farmland remains dependent on uncertain rainfall. |
| Everyone knows that the most important input for the farmer is water. By not meeting the targets for creating irrigation facilities, the country is letting go of the easiest opportunity to boost farm production. It is worth recalling that much of the growth in agricultural output in the past was accounted for by the expansion of irrigation facilities. It is a pity, therefore, that when agriculture needs another push similar to the one it got at the time of the Green Revolution, irrigation is not getting the attention its desperately needs. |
First Published: Dec 25 2007 | 12:00 AM IST