UB
barley to be grown in Punjab
NEW
DELHI: Punjab Agro Industries Corporation (PAIC) and United Breweries
(UBL) will sign an agreement on contract farming barley. The
pact is to cover around 10,000 acres this year, with a plan to cover
one lakh acres in the forthcoming season.
The
coverage will be extended to 2.5 lakh acres by 2005, with the option
of extending it further to cover half a million acres or more in the
successive years.
Pushing
barley as an integral part of the government’s efforts to bring back
the three-crop cycle to Punjab even while de-focussing from foodgrain
cultivation, state chief minister Amarinder Singh today announced
the joint initiative which involves an assured buyback commitment
from UBL to the government.
The
PAIC, in turn, will initiate the programme with the farmers of Punjab,
primarily in the districts of Mansa, Bathinda, Muktsar where barley
farming is being extended as part of the new agreement. UBL will provide
the technology support to farmers, as part of the current contract
farming agreement on barley. Barley is already being grown in Patiala
and Sangrur districts.
The
high-yielding varieties of barley developed by UBL and extensively
grown and tested by them in collaboration with PAICL in the past one
year are capable of a yield of 20-22 quintals per acre, sources said.
That would work out to around 2,20,000 quintals of barley in the first
phase of contract farming.
Punjab
Agro will have two other programmes with state farmers. One, for commercial
grain production and the other, for seed multiplication. “Along with
the move away from the unsustainable paddy-wheat cycle, our aim is
to introduce a three-crop cycle in Punjab which would provide better
returns and, at the same time, give farmers additional income,” Mr
Singh said. “The state will now focus on becoming a major supplier
of premium malting barley to the country and ultimately to Asia as
part of the concerted effort to diversify agriculture,” he added.
Sources said Punjab Agro, in collaboration with UB, would use the
resources of Punjab Agricultural University and skilled farmers of
the state to “rapidly multiply the two-row Malting Barley VJM 315
to provide seed for planting in one lakh acres in the forthcoming
season. Thereafter, the variety would be multiplied to cover a larger
area of over two lakh acres.”
According
to Mr Kalyan Ganguly, MD, UB, the VJM 315 two-row variety of barley
being launched today was entirely different from the conventional
six-row barley as it was bigger and heavier in grain, had ideal protein
content of 9.5%-11%, higher yields vis-a-vis the conventional crop,
resistant to a number of diseases, required relatively far lower inputs
and performed far better under cold conditions with a 125-day crop
duration cycle.
TIMES
NEWS NETWORK
[ SATURDAY, AUGUST
02, 2003 05:55:41 AM ]