Dryzone Agriculture: Characteristics of Dry Zone Agriculture

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DRYZONE AGRICULTURE

Characteristics of Dry Zone Agriculture


1. Low Rainfall: These are the sub-humid parts of the country receiving less than 100cm of
rainfall. Such areas cover Punjab, Haryana, South-western U.P., M.P., eastern Rajasthan,
eastern Gujarat, & interior regions of Maharashtra(Vidarbha, Marathwada), Karnatka(plateau
region), Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh (Telangana & Rayalseema).Besides low rainfall,
these regions face uncertainity in terms of failure of rainfall, & late onset, early withdrawal or
long dry spells of monsoon.
2. Lack of assured irrigation: The crops grown and cropping practices followed in dry zone
region entirely depend on rainfall. Thus it is also referred to as rainfed agriculture.
3. Mainly subsistence farming practiced: Farmers, especially the small and marginal farmers,
who form the bulk of cultivators in these areas, practice subsistence farming. It is
characterized by low productivity, low yields, low income and low capital formation. These
regions coincide with the drought-prone belt of the country and the population here is faced
with unemployment and under-employment during monsoon failure and during the lean
season.
4. Livestock, Fisheries and Horticulture: Livestock production forms a key component of
rural livelihoods in rainfed regions. Estimates suggest that 70% of agricultural GDP in arid
areas and 40% in semi-arid areas come from rearing of livestock- accounting fo r around 55%
of the total livestock population, estimated to be 350 million in 2003. Livestock contributes
over 20% of the annual income of rural households; the share rising to nearly 30%
percentage for households with less than 1 hectare of land. In dryland livestock as well as
inland fisheries production, the two common concerns arise from (i) the acute dependence
of the poorest population groups on these two sub-sectors, and (ii) the rapid rate at which
the natural resources-g razing lands, commons, diversity of crop residue available, grass and
local medicinal plants, common water bodies, diversity of local specie s of animals and fish are getting degraded. The limited public sector support that the rainfed areas receive either
add to the problem or are oblivious of the existence of the massive potential for inclusive
growth. Moreover, the drylands are also terrains where regular battles are fought between
villages and forest officials over grazing rights.
5. Common Pool Resources: CPRs or commons are an important component of the rainfed
production systems, which is also one of the most neglected even in the schemes and
programmes that purport to explicitly focu s on physical resour ces. Though a common
definition of common pools do not exist, in the Indian context CPRs include community
pastures, community forests, Government Wastelands, common dumping and threshing
grounds, river beds, watershed drainages, villag e ponds and rivers etc.
Management of CPRs is an essential part of natural resource management in rainfed areas.
Commons are not only a refuge to which vulnerable households and populations can turn
to when everything else fails, it is a foundation on which multiple production systems rest in
a manner that strengthens their resilience. It is in the commons-livestock-agriculture
interface and the larger geo-hydrological functions the commons play that the inter-

connectedness of the system and its resilience ca n be located. Hence, we need to


strengthen symbiotic relationships between commons, livestock, soil fertility, pest
management, soil moisture management, watershed development and agriculture,
especially in rainfed areas. Given the overall policy neglect and limited investments in rainfed
areas, the subsidy derived from commons forms a critical contribution to both
livestock/fisheries and agricultural production systems.

Significance/Performance of Dry Zone Agriculture


Rainfed agriculture (crop and animal husbandry) is now emerging as a major opportunity in raising
overall agricultural growth. Even after achieving the full irrigation potential, nearly 50% of the net
cultivated area will remain dependent on rainfall. Rain-fed agriculture supports nearly 40% of Indias
estimated population of 1210 million in 2011. India ranks first among the rainfed countries in the
world in terms of rainfed area, but ranks among the lowest in rainfed yields (<1t/ha).
Spanning several agro-ecological regions, the rainfed areas represent the geography with the largest
concentration of poverty and backwardness. The key thrust in agricultural policy till now has been to
extend technologies to these areas that have evolved to enhance productivity in well endowed areas.
This has not led to achieve significant gains while resource degradation problems, such as loss in soil
fertility, groundwater depletion, loss of biodiversity and increase in climate associated vulnerabilities
etc. have continued to exacerbate. At the same time, inadequate support for rainfed agriculture in
terms of support price, availability of appropriate inputs, credit, market access and agricultural
research and extension has caused widespread desperation among farmers.
Even with the policy neglect, the contribution of rainfed agriculture to the national economy is by no
means small. The most striking feature of rainfed farming is the diversity of agricultural activities. With
the cultivation of over 34 crops in a year as compared to 4 or 5 as in case of irrigated system and
where livestock, horticulture, agro forestry, seed spices, medicinal & aromatic plants, fishery (in high
rainfall areas), bee keeping etc., farmers and farming systems in rainfed areas reveal a portfolio of
survival and production options.
Rainfed agriculture accounts for 60 % of total cropped area, 48% of the area under food crops and 68%
of that under non-food crops. In terms of crop groups, 77% of pulses, 66% of oilseeds and 45% of
cereals are grown under rainfed conditions. Foodgrain production in India grew at a rate of 1.26% per
annum between 1990-93 and 2003-06. Meeting the future demand for foodgrains (estimated at 280
million tones by 2020) would require a step up in the rate of growth of food production where rainfed
agriculture has to play an important role. As estimated by the Technical Committee on Watershed
Development (2006), even in the best possible scenario of irrigation development, about 40% of the
additional supply of foodgrains needed to match future rise in demand will have to come from the
rainfed agriculture. Therefore, a breakthrough in rainfed agriculture is an imperative for poverty
alleviation, livelihood promotion and food security in India.
The rainfed crops have shown more impressive growth rates in recent years as compared to irrigated
crops like rice and wheat. The compound growth rates for the period 1998-99 to 2008 -09 reveal that
production of coarse cereals increased at a rate of 2.73%; although production of pulses continued to
be an area of concern. Much of this is cultivated in multiple cropping systems. There are crop

sequences and combinations tuned to undulating terrains, soil moisture, availability and use of farm
yard manure (FYM) or other bio-mass and fertilizers, traditional pest management practices at times
integrated with modern pesticides, and emerging markets (as evident in the case of sorghum,
soyabean, cotton, etc.). Contrary to the irrigated production systems that focus on individual
crops/commodities, the key feature of rainfed cropping is the attention paid to the entire farming
system and what can be harvested best.

Emerging Problems of Dry Zone Agriculture


1. Land degradation and soil fertility: Soil fertility variations and its depletion due to
imbalanced nutrition has emerged as a significant factor contributing to instability of dry
zone agriculture. The major soil types of rainfed regions are Alfisols(30%), Vertisols(35%), and
Entisols(10%). Replacement of legumes in the cropping systems with more remunerative
crops like cotton and maize in several rainfed agro-ecological zones has contributed to
depletion of soil fertility. Erosion due to water is continuing unabated and currently 73.3 mha
of land is affected by water erosion. In the absence of external nutrient application, both soil
fertility and crop yields show declining trend in rainfed regions. Since the Green Revolution,
the national agricultural policy is driven by the need to maximize crop yield, using irrigation
and intensive use of HYVs, chemical fertilizers and pesticides. The status of natural resources
and the condition of rainfed farming have received little attention. As a result, the natural
resource base especially in rainfed areas has been badly degraded. Soil erosion by wind and
water, acidity, alkalinity/salinity and other complex problems are the principal causes for
land degradation.
2. Increasing Input Costs: Productivity is dependent on the level of input use such as seed,
fertilizers and pesticides. However, the levels use of inputs is determined by the relative
prices of inputs as well as by the response of yield to the inputs. While the latter is a function
of technology, weather and environment, the former reflects the market and policy
environment. Chemical fertilizers are highly subsidized in India. Supported by such heavy
subsidies, encouraging unbalanced soil nutrition, the overuse of chemical fertilizers has
resulted in severe degradation of soil and groundwater in many parts of the country. Since
chemical fertilizer use is conditional upon assured availability of water, the water constraint
in rainfed areas demands alternative ways of enhancing soil fertility. As long as the non-pr ice
factors such as irrigation and quality of seed are well taken care of, farmers will still be able
to optimize the input use levels provided they have the access to credit. However, many
small and marginal farmers are left out of the ambit of institutional credit for various reasons
and are having to pay high cost for the capital borrowed from non-institutional sources.
Thus, the cost of cultivation of most rainfed crops increased considerably over time
contributing to production instability.
3. Marketing and Profitability: Access to input and output markets and the market
information is the key to converting yield gains in to higher incomes. However, markets in
India particularly in rainfed regions are underdeveloped and farmers are exposed to high
price risk. Small and marginal farmers now constitute over 80 percent of farming households
in India. They have only very small quantities of marketable surplus. Moreover, their staying
power is low because of their extreme poverty. As a result, these farmers sell off most of
their produce in the local markets at very low prices immediately after the harvest. Thus,

farmers suffer even in years of a good harvest, since they are not able to get good price
realization. Longer marketing channels result in farmers getting a lower share of what
consumers pay for the same produce. Rainfed crops suffer a bias vis a vis irrigated crops such
as rice and wheat in terms of infrastructure and procurement support. The low market
surplus of the small and marginal farmers denies them any economies of scale and
bargaining power. The production risk arising out of the very nature of rainfed agricultu re
coupled with the price risk results in low profitability of rainfed agriculture, low investment
on technology and production instability.

4.

Threat of Climate Change: In addition, climate change poses a vital challenge to natural
resources. Through its direct and indirect impacts-on crop yields, pests and diseases, land
and water resources; climate change is expected to affect sustainable agriculture through
multiple pathways, thereby having an effect on livelihoods and the overall food security
situation in the country. In rainfed production systems climate risks are likely to be more
intense. Vulnerability of farming systems to climate change depends on the level of exposure
and sensitivity to the climate hazard along with the capacity to cope. A number of local-level
environmental, social and economic factors contribute to the differential vulnerability of
diverse farming systems and the communities involved. In this context, it seems rational for
overall agricultural policy as well as the research system to prioritize issues related to
resilience to climate risks, and strengthen the capacity of natural resources to overcome
various forms of climate stress, as a critical requirement to achieve food security.

Strategic Framework for Development of Rainfed Agriculture


Rainfed agriculture is showing high growth potential in spite of the cumulative neglect over
time both in terms of investments made and appropriateness of such investments. Increasing
demand for and prices of livestock products (meat, fish, etc.), and pulses and millets are opening up
immense potential for inclusive economic growth; as much of these products are produced by the
poor in extensive systems on common pool natural resources and in rainfed lands that they
cultivate.
The imperatives of an inclusive growth however, need to be seen from the following
perspectives:

1. Subsistence orientation of production:


High emphasis on increase in productivity of food crops, in these regions with
chronic hunger, directly contributes to household food and nutrition security.
Increasing average productivity on an extensive scale (larger coverage of area and
households irrespective of their potential productivity) will have larger social
dividends rather than focusing only on high marketed surplus from few
progressive-farms or intensive systems or districts.
Internalising the inputs within farming systems and local natural resources reduces
costs and strengthen household resilience to increasingly volatile price and climate
vulnerability contexts.
2. Investing on rainfed production systems simultaneously addresses the issues of
marginalization of tribal communities, threat of extremism, high incidence of distress
leading to farmers suicides and adverse impacts of climate change.
3. Many of the interventions proposed have high potential for carbon sequestration and
can contribute substantially to climate change mitigation and adaptation in these areas.

4. Diversity in production systems is a built-in livelihood-resilience mechanism in rainfed


areas providing substantial insulation from climate change and market vulnerabilities.
5. Majority of the farmers being small holders, household level economic security and
growth comes from increasing productivity of multiple sources of livelihoods/ assets that
they depend upon rather than increasing per ha productivity of any crop in a potential
area.
6. Labor intensity and labor productivity must be seen together as the local economy needs
to generate incomes to vast majority of population till the time they shift to non-farm
sectors.
7. Women play a critical role in the production systems as producers, decision makers and
knowledge keepers - their role in the local institutions and support systems need to be
prominent
8. Production systems in rainfed areas, livestock in particular, depend substantially on
common pool resources collective access to which needs to be protected and
strengthened.
9. Intensive public investments in these regions gives spurt to private investments up the
value chains and enhance institutional development.
The above calls for a paradigm shift in public policy as productivity of diverse and integrated
systems (at household and area level), with greater resilience and lower risk need to be promoted
rather than the conventional narrow sectoral productivities in single commodities in an input
intensive and high input-response framework.
The Working Groups deliberations have clearly brought out ten strategic elements for
harnessing the inclusive growth potential of rainfed areas consistent with the imperatives laid
above:
1. Need for comprehensive and adequate investments in an integrated and relevant
institutional and technological framework.
2. A shift away from a single commodity approach to NRM based farming systems
approach focusing on producing diverse products that mutually reinforce and can be
supported by the available natural resource base without undermining its sustainability.
3. Efforts to build resilience of the system along with capacities for adaptation to climate
variability and change should not be compromised as the rainfed areas are ecologically
fragile and highly vulnerable to vagaries of climate.
4. Focus on strengthening and improving productivity of extensive livestock and crop
systems through improved service delivery and knowledge management and harness
the potential of agronomic and management innovations such as System of Rice
Intensification, NPM, conservation agriculture etc., .
5. Invest on and strengthen institutional capacities to handle high local variations in the
natural resources endowments and production systems, through decentralized planning,
implementation and governance anchored in Panchayati Raj Institutions.
6. Making Rain Water Use Efficiency central to the paradigmatic shift.
7. Strategic shift towards supportive/protective irrigationfor kharif crops from the present
limited access, intensive irrigation for few, thus, extending the safety net.
8. Put in place robust Commons Policy empowering community level institutions to
manage, improve, and use products and services that form substantive basis for the
production systems.
9. Strengthening responsive support structures and infrastructure such as diverse seed
systems, improving the fodder base, technical services, and common facilities for
aggregation etc. that involve higher transaction costs. Reducing the higher transaction

costs and risks is essential to foster private investment by farmers and organized private
sector.
10. Creating budgetary and institutional instruments for convergence rather than expecting
it to happen in the myriad of schemes and departmental actors that operate in vertical
tunnels.
There is a clear need to break from the past and evolve policy framework within the context of
rainfed areas rather than extending the approach adopted thus far.

Strategic Framework for Action in the 12th FYP


1. First and foremost is the need to recognize the need for and, the nature of investments
required. Rainfed farming systems development is equated with watershed development in
the past plans. Experience within watershed program suggests the need for investments on
production systems improvement even to realize productivity gains out of the conservation
investments in watershed programs. Secondly, natural resources management needs to be
integrated into the land, crop husbandry and animal husbandry in annual cycles. Thirdly, at
any given point in time only certain minor percent of area will be under watershed
development. Substantial public investments over and above the crucial watershed
development need to be made on revitalizing the production systems in rainfed areas on a
sustainable basis.
2. Given the ecosystem specificities, the working group strongly felt that extension of intensive
external input focussed, mono-species, agriculture paradigm evolved in the context of
intensive irrigated areas to rainfed areas would be highly unsustainable, even in the short
run. A separate policy dispensation must be evolved (in the lines argued in this report) that
guides public investments, technology and institution development in rainfed areas. This
needs a fresh outlook on the policy, institution, program and investment architecture, which
is not readily available.
3. The Strategic Action Areas for the 12th FYP:
a. Evolving a comprehensive architecture for rainfed areas development: It is
recommended that a larger comprehensive National Rainfed Farming Program (NRFP)
be tried out as a learning ground in the 12th FYP to understand and establish a new
paradigm of development of rainfed areas.
i. Such a program also builds a grass-roots level convergence experience across
RD, Panchayat Raj, Agriculture and Water Resources ministries programs
(RKVY, MGNREGS, BRGF, NRLM, NFSM and other programs).
ii. Some of the Special Area Programs (Special state packages such as
Bundelkhand package, Prime Ministers Relief, HADP etc.) can also be
integrated with this program with provision for special assistance. The
location specificities are inherently taken into account in the programs
framework suggested by this Working Group.
iii. This program needs to be tried out as a convergence model in 1000 selected
blocks across different agro-ecological regions to generate a working
experience that can be universalized in the 13th FYP. The exact number of
blocks and their selection criteria need to be further discussed.
iv. The program also aims at converging actions from civil society, research, and
line departments.
b. Creating a separate, flexible investment window for rainfed areas in each of the

mainstream line-department programs: This is necessary as many of the mainstream


programs have an overarching design bias in favor of irrigated systems (be it
agriculture, horticulture, animal husbandry, water resources or fisheries). A separate
window for rainfed areas with separate program guidelines will help in promoting a
relevant paradigm. Soil organic matter, critical irrigation, diverse crop systems, small
ruminants, fisheries in small seasonal water bodies are but few examples for
illustration. These special investment windows in all mainstream programs must be
accessible for all rainfed areas, even beyond the 1000 blocks taken up for intensive
development. Such special focus also needs to be brought into ICAR and SAUs
budgets.

c. Supportive Policy Action is needed in the areas of evolving and strengthening


institutions for rainfed areas, Common pool land and water resources and
restructuring Groundwater use and management, particularly in aligning and making
them consistent with the relevant paradigm.
i.
Evolving an institutional architecture for public interventions in agriculture
and allied sectors in rainfed areas
ii.
Diverse Crop Patterns with a focus on millets and minor pulses: The much
required diversity of crop patterns can be protected only if the traditional
rainfed crops - millets and minor pulses in particular, arebrought back into the
farming systems through demand generation and easing production and
processing constraints. The strategy must be a combination of appropriate
price incentives, inclusion of these in the Public Distribution System, MDMP
and other food related programs, and promotion of value added products.
The target for 12th plan is to restore the area under these crops to the level of
2001. A shift towards localizing the food security program with a built in
objective of bringing diverse food crops into cultivation and consumption can
be a strategic instrument.
iii.
Commons: Mapping of common lands in the districts where they are
substantial, characterizing them, identifying various legal provisions in the
states is one area of action. The second area is to evolve and get broader
consensus on Commons Policy within states duly backed up by appropriate
legislation. The case of Rajasthan where such a process has been spearheaded
by FES is an example.
iv.
Groundwater: In the groundwater dependent rainfed areas, appropriate
policy focus need to be brought in to institutionalize participatory
groundwater management, promote critical life-saving irrigation based
systems (through creating positive incentives for sharing of groundwater)
backed up by appropriate legislation and institutional support for
implementation of the legal provisions. Such draft legislation is being actively
considered by the Rural Development Department, Government of Andhra
Pradesh.
It is recommended that a separate program Protection of Rainfed Crops from Climate
Vagaries be taken up on a pilot basis jointly by the Ministry of Rural Development and
Ministry of Water Resources to promote protective irrigation for farmers having no access
to groundwater. Participatory Groundwater Management (anchored at Gram Panchayats)
can be incentivized with investments from this scheme.

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