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Help from the skies for Basmati growers

This monsoon Basmati growers in the country will get satellite-aided farm inputs as sowing begins amid strong export competition from Pakistan and higher internal demand.

Updated on: May 26, 2009 10:51 PM IST
Hindustan Times | By , New Delhi
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This monsoon Basmati growers in the country will get satellite-aided farm inputs as sowing begins amid strong export competition from Pakistan and higher internal demand.

HT Image
HT Image

The government has roped in a private satellite technology firm, selected through nation-wide bidding, to carry out sky studies on acreage, crop health and yields of basmati.

It will also study non-basmati rice for the ensuing 2009 kharif season — June to October.

The study will not only focus on Indian basmati-growing regions but will also map out total area under non-basmati and basmati rice in the Punjab area of Pakistan, which has been trying to outsell India in the hot basmati markets of EU countries.

These essentially remote-sensing studies will be conducted in Punjab, Haryana, Uttarakhand, Delhi, Jammu and Kashmir and 26 districts of Uttar Pradesh.

A satellite-based imagery study to monitor crop health is more precise and will do away with the need for time-consuming and expensive labour-intensive field surveys.

It will also help exporters collate data to devise export strategies.

The reports will be submitted for the months of July, August, September, October and November 2009 and a final report along with post-harvest reports will be turned in by December 2009.

India’s basmati rice exports are estimated to have jumped by 13 per cent despite a cess of Rs 8,000 a tonne in the last crop year, ending September 2008, according to official figures.

India and Pakistan are currently locked in an international wrangle to claim Geographical Indication or GI status for basmati. A GI tag for Indian basmati would mean that no other country would be able to lay claim, patent or sell rice under the basmati name.

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Zia Haq

Zia Haq reports on public policy, economy and agriculture. Particularly interested in development economics and growth theories.

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