Agriculture

North India faces an acute fodder shortage, courtesy wheat crisis, climate change

Wheat straw is being sold at Rs 1,100-1,700 per quintal; it was being sold at Rs 400-600 per quintal last year

 
By Arvind Shukla
Published: Monday 16 May 2022
A buffalo giving 10 litres of milk needs an average of 30 kg of fodder in a day. Photo: iStock

Farmers across north Indian states are facing a shortage of dry fodder due to the wheat crisis, which in turn, has been primarily fuelled by an unusually hot March, according to farmers, agricultural scientists and experts.

Many farmers chose to plant mustard instead of wheat this rabi season in north India. This is not just because mustard requires less water than wheat but also because the crop was getting better prices.

The shortage of wheat yield has led to a crisis of cattle feed in many northern states. Several of them, including Haryana, Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhand, have imposed a complete or indefinite ban on sending straw to other states.

Wheat straw is now being sold at two to three times the rates of last year. It was being sold at Rs 400-600 per quintal last year. It is now being sold at Rs 1,100-1,700 per quintal. Wheat straw in Bikaner, Rajasthan, is being sold at Rs 2,000 per quintal.

Several farmers this reporter spoke to, complained about the acute shortage of fodder across north India.

Ajay Kumar, a farmer from Modaliya village in Mathura district, Uttar Pradesh, has four buffaloes. “I purchased 40 kg of straw last month which cost me Rs 550. Last year, the same straw cost Rs 150-200, which means it has become three times more expensive,” he said.

“I think there was more cultivation of mustard and less wheat here. Hence, the straw became expensive,” Kumar said.

Asuram Godara, a farmer from Bikaner district in Rajasthan, said, “There is no straw here. What is available, is way too expensive. The immediate reason for the shortage is the absence of straw from Haryana and Punjab. But in the long run, water scarcity and weather are responsible.”

Godara said the water shortage in the region had caused wheat cultivation to decline. “We could not even cultivate sorghum last year because of water shortages. Else, the animals would have eaten the same this season,” he said.

Harvinder Singh, a farmer from Sriganganagar district in northern Rajasthan that adjoins Punjab, also blamed the weather for the shortage of straw and fodder.

“The sowing of wheat has come down all over Rajasthan. Farmers are sowing crops such as gram and mustard that require less water,” Singh said.

VK Singh, deputy director of the animal husbandry department in Uttar Pradesh, also cited other reasons. He told this reporter:

The biggest reason for the shortage of fodder is mechanisation. Farmers cannot get straw if they thresh wheat with a machine. Farmers, instead, have to burn their fields. Thus, animals can’t graze.

He added that due to declining land holdings, farmers now prefer to grow cereals or fruits and vegetables. Also, the village commons that were used for grazing, have been heavily encroached upon.

Hungry livestock

India has the world’s largest number of farmers and livestock. It has 535 million livestock animals according to the 20th Livestock Census conducted in 2019, most of them cattle, followed by water buffaloes.

These are also the animals that eat the most fodder, especially straw because it can be stored for a long time.

According to agricultural and livestock scientists, a cow and a buffalo need an average of 4-8 kg of straw. This quantity can increase in the absence of green fodder.

Putaan singh, scientist at the Indian Veterinary Research Institute in Palampur, Himachal Pradesh, said:

Straw is the major source of fodder for livestock in India. A buffalo giving 10 litres of milk needs an average of 30 kg of fodder a day. This should consist of four kg of grain, 4-5 kg of straw and the rest of green fodder. But in the absence of green fodder, farmers become dependent on straw.

Putaan Singh said there were two main ways to tackle the fodder crisis. “One is that the government imposes a complete ban on the commercial use of straw. The use of straw in the paper industry as well as brick kilns needs to be stopped.”

He added that farmers should also sow green fodder. There are many varieties that give up to 4-6 harvests once planted.

“Sugar mills can make bricks from straw, molasses and bagasse. This will not only be useful and nutritious for livestock but sugar mills will also get work all year round,” he said.

VK Singh said his department was doing its best to tackle the fodder crisis. “District magistrates and allied departments have come out with tenders. A lot of people are also donating straw. Apart from this, we have given seeds to farmers to grow green fodder,” he said.

Subscribe to Daily Newsletter :

Comments are moderated and will be published only after the site moderator’s approval. Please use a genuine email ID and provide your name. Selected comments may also be used in the ‘Letters’ section of the Down To Earth print edition.