-The Economic Times The Centre has asked states to introduce millets in mid-day meal schemes in schools to boost demand for the nutritious grain, but experts say the move would also ease pressure on food stocks as rice output is expected to decline this year and the food security legislation would require an additional 63 million tonnes of grain. The government expects a 9% fall in this year's output of rice,...
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Drought to hit coarse cereals, pulses, oilseeds output: Pawar
-The Business Standard Despite a marked improvement in the southwest Monsoon, Agriculture Minister Sharad Pawar on Wednesday said production of coarse cereals, pulses, oilseeds and rice, to some extent, would be less than last year. For sugar, the cane area is more. But, Pawar said, some drop in production can be expected as farmers in Karnataka and Maharashtra have diverted a sizeable portion of standing crop towards fodder. Announcing the second relief package...
More »Monsoon revival unlikely to boost food production; food prices likely to go up- Rituraj Tiwari
-The Economic Times A late revival of Monsoon may have narrowed the rain deficit to single digit (9%) but it is unlikely to help boost food grains production. "There would be a decline in the overall food grains production. There would be some drop in the production of pulses and coarse cereals," said Agriculture Secretary Ashish Bahuguna. He said the indication will start coming after the first advance estimates of the kharif...
More »Govt works on new Monsoon model -Zia Haq
-The Hindustan Times India is building a new system to predict the Monsoons - one that will forecast summer rain more accurately than the present model. This comes after the ministry of earth sciences, which oversees the Met department, concluded that its 'empirical method' has become obsolete. The new model - called the dynamic model - will cost Rs. 400 crore and take three years to be ready. "Though the empirical model is still...
More »As the Monsoon plays truant, suicide by farmers likely to manifest again-KK Narayanan
-The Economic Times As the Monsoon plays truant, the tragic face of our agrarian distress, suicide by farmers, is likely to manifest again in several parts of the country. A state like Maharashtra, where large acreages of a cash crop like cotton are grown under rain-fed conditions, is particularly vulnerable to such vagaries of weather and has, for long, remained the 'suicide capital' of the country. There is credible data to show...
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