Economic Survey 2017: Volume I, Chapter 6: Climate, Climate Change, and Agriculture
Published By: Ministry of Finance, Govt of India | Published Date: January, 29 , 2018Using district-level data on temperature, rainfall and crop production, this
chapter documents a long-term trend of rising temperatures, declining average
precipitation, and increase in extreme precipitation events. A key finding—and
one with significant implications as climate change looms—is that the impact of
temperature and rainfall is felt only in the extreme; that is, when temperatures
are much higher, rainfall significantly lower, and the number of “dry days”
greater, than normal. A second key finding is that these impacts are significantly
more adverse in unirrigated areas (and hence rainfed crops) compared to irrigated
areas (and hence cereals). Applying these estimates to projected long-term weather
patterns implies that climate change could reduce annual agricultural incomes in
the range of 15 percent to 18 percent on average, and up to 20 percent to 25
percent for unirrigated areas. Minimizing susceptibility to climate change requires
drastically extending irrigation via efficient drip and sprinkler technologies
(realizing “more crop for every drop”), and replacing untargeted subsidies in
power and fertilizer by direct income support. More broadly, the cereal-centricity
of policy needs to be reviewed
Author(s): Arun Jaitley | Posted on: Jan 31, 2018 | Views() | Download (108)