"... But the successes of the green revolution are in retreat. ... Use of
sewage and industrially contaminated water for irrigation has drenched
Punjab's soils in heavy metals and other poisons. ... Meanwhile, the
report by Punjab's government encourages farmers to alleviate the twin
crises of environmental degradation and falling productivity by returning
to traditional practices. ... In short, it recommends many of the
agricultural practices that the green revolution swept away."

http://www.economist.com/subscriptions/offer.cfm?campaign=168-XLMT

Sep 24th 2007

Punjabis are poisoning themselves

IF INDIAN newspaper reports are to be believed, the children of Punjab are
in the throes of a grey revolution. Even those as young as ten are
sprouting tufts of white and grey hair. Some are going blind. In Punjabi
villages, children and adults are afflicted by uncommon cancers.

The reason is massive and unregulated use of pesticides and other
agricultural chemicals in India's most intensively farmed state. According
to an environmental report by Punjab's government, the modest-sized state
accounts for 17% of India's total pesticide use. The state's water,
people, animals, milk and agricultural produce are all poisoned with the
stuff.

Ignorance is part of the problem. The report includes details of a survey
suggesting that nearly one-third of Punjabi farmers were unaware that
pesticides come with instructions for use. Half of the farmers ignored
these instructions. Three-quarters put empty pesticide containers to
domestic uses.

Yet, over 250 dense pages, the report also reveals structural problems in
the state's agricultural sector that no mere education programme could
address.

Punjab was the totemic success of India's green revolution, a leap forward
in agricultural productivity during the 1960s and 1970s that ended the
subcontinent's periodic famines. It was based on the introduction of a few
simple technologies--including artificial fertilisers, pesticides and
better seeds. In Punjab, especially, the benefits were massive.

Between 1960 and 2005 the state's annual food-grain production increased
from 3m tonnes to 25m tonnes. Punjab, one of India's richest states on a
per capita basis, supplies more than half the country's central grain
reserves.

But the successes of the green revolution are in retreat. Punjab's
agricultural growth rate has slowed from 5% in the 1980s to less than 2%
since 2000. In the past five years production of food grains has increased
by 2%, and the state's population has grown by 8.6%.

"Punjab, the most stunning example of the green revolution in India, is
now at the crossroads," the report states. "The present agricultural
system in Punjab has become unsustainable and non-profitable... the
state's agriculture has reached the highest production levels possible
under the available technologies."

Indeed, the technologies available to farmers are part of the problem:
"Over-intensification of agriculture over the years has led to overall
degradation of the fragile agro-ecosystem of the state"

In particular, massive use of nitrogenous fertilisers--which draw multiple
crops from Punjab's rather poor soil--has reduced the soil's overall
fertility and led to widespread soil erosion.

Massive application of pesticides has meanwhile extinguished some pests
and insects while letting others thrive, including the American bollworm,
an unpleasant cotton blight, and rice-leaf folder. Many of these survivors
have developed resistance to common pesticides.

Intensive irrigation--especially from tube-wells, of which there are over
a million in Punjab--has depleted the water-table. It dropped by 55cm each
year between 1993 and 2003. Partly as a result, the land irrigated by
canals has decreased by 35% since 1990.

Use of sewage and industrially contaminated water for irrigation has
drenched Punjab's soils in heavy metals and other poisons.

The state's government is not entirely passive before this catastrophe. It
has banned the use of several agricultural chemicals. And it has taken
steps to encourage organic farming. But there is much more it could do.

In particular, it needs to scrap its populist policy--reintroduced in
2005--of providing farmers with free electricity. Though a great
vote-grabber, the policy encourages farmers to pump water up from their
tube-wells both day and night.

Equally disastrous is a subsidy on agricultural fertilisers, for which
India's central government is responsible. There is little hope of turning
Indian farmers greener until both subsidies are ended.

Meanwhile, the report by Punjab's government encourages farmers to
alleviate the twin crises of environmental degradation and falling
productivity by returning to traditional practices.

It recommends they use rice and wheat straw for mulch instead of burning
it, rotate their crops, use a range of different seeds, manure their
fields, and so on. In short, it recommends many of the agricultural
practices that the green revolution swept away.

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