views
New Delhi: India's farm sector shrank for the first time in five years in the year ended March 31, Agriculture Minister Radha Mohan Singh said on Wednesday, a day after the government forecast a likely drought in 2015 that could hit output again.
The weather office has cut this year's monsoon forecast on an El Nino weather pattern that raised fears of the first drought in six years.
El Nino, an event marked by warmer surface waters in the Pacific Ocean, increases the chance of droughts in the Asia Pacific region, including Australia, Southeast Asia and India.
The monsoon rains are vital for the rural economy as three-fifth of India's population of over 1.2 billion depend on farming for their livelihood.
Farm sector accounts for around 15 per cent of a $1.2 trillion economy, one of the fastest growing economies of the world where half of croplands lack irrigation.
India's economy, Asia's third-largest, grew 7.5 per cent year-on-year in the last quarter through March, outstripping China's 7 per cent growth in the same quarter.
But the farm sector posted two straight quarters of negative growth of 1.1 per cent each to March.
The sector grew 3.7 percent in 2013/14 following a protracted monsoon in 2013.
The four-month long rain season in summer normally starts on June 1, after hitting the southern coast. In 2015, the onset over the Kerala coast has been delayed by five days to around June 5.
Singh's ministry has been working on area specific drought plans for 580 odd districts since April when the weather office had forecast a poor monsoon season for 2015.
In 2014, timely supplies of drought resilient seeds, fertilisers and diesel subsidies minimised damage to grains though the monsoon was 12 percent deficient, Singh said.
Comments
0 comment