Editorial

Deficit Rainfall in Northeast, Crop Production May Fall

Sentinel Digital Desk

Mountainous Northeast India experienced a 26 per cent deficit during the monsoon, causing fears of falling crop production and scarcity of water, experts said. According to officials of the India Meteorological Department (IMD), this year’s deficiency during the four-month monsoon (June-September) is the highest in the last five years.

Seven of the northeastern states are divided into three meteorological sub-divisions – Assam and Meghalaya; Arunachal Pradesh; and Nagaland, Manipur, Mizoram and Tripura. The eighth state, Sikkim, along with

North West Bengal, forms a separate sub-division.

According to an official report of the IMD, the Arunachal Pradesh sub-division recorded the highest deficiency of 31 per cent followed by 26 per cent in the Assam and Meghalaya sub-division. The Nagaland, Manipur, Mizoram and Tripura sub-division registered a 22 per cent shortfall between June and September.

“Northeast India and eastern India, comprising sub-Himalayan West Bengal, Sikkim, Gangetic West Bengal, Jharkhand and Bihar, recorded 1,061.9 mm rainfall during the monsoon against the normal (average) rainfall of 1,403.7 mm,” the IMD report said.

IMD Director Dilip Saha told IANS: “The insufficient effect of deep depressions and low pressure, besides unfavourable wind patterns caused deficient rainfall in the northeastern region. The IMD headquarters forecast in April also envisaged a deficient rainfall in the northeastern region.”

“It would take one more week for the monsoon to withdraw from the northeastern region. Some parts of the region, including Assam and Tripura, witnessed good and excess pre-monsoon rainfall and in the post-monsoon period we expect average rainfall,” he added.

According to IMD guidelines, Saha said if the monsoon rainfall was plus or minus 19 per cent it would be termed as average, plus 20 per cent it would be described as excess and minus 20 per cent to minus 59 per cent would be deficient.

Experts predicted that the insufficient monsoon would affect crop production in the northeastern region, where agriculture provides livelihood support to 70 per cent of region’s 45.58 million population (2011 census).

Principal Scientist of Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR) Biswajit Das said that shortage of rainfall would certainly affect the production of crops and various insects might even harm the crop.

“The northeastern region is mostly dependent on rainwater for harvesting of various crops as the irrigation facilities are very limited in the hilly region. The government should create many check dams, minor irrigation projects and develop reservoirs,” Das told IANS.

He said that the ICAR has been guiding farmers through various modes, including SMSes, to cope with the prevailing situation.

Another ICAR expert said that floods, deficient and excess rainfall are affecting crops, especially vegetables, in the northeast region every year.

Agricultural and water resource expert Manas Majumder said the region, which consists of eight per cent of country’s geographical area and four per cent of the country’s population, has inherent advantages to exploit rain-water harvesting.

“However, the rate of harnessing and utilizing irrigation potential has been low since only 20 to 25 per cent of net cultivable land is irrigated. The Accelerated Irrigation Benefit Programme emphasizes exploiting surface irrigation through minor irrigation schemes in the region,” Majumder told IANS.

In the hilly areas of the region, shifting cultivation, locally known as jhum, continues to be a dominant mode of food production and the economic mainstay of many households of the tribals, who constitute around 28 per cent of the region’s population.

Sujit Chakraborty

(Sujit Chakraborty can be contacted at sujit.c@ians.in)

(IANS)