Farmers may be asked to irrigate less in India

Bloomberg

India should provide incentives to farmers to adopt efficient water use to avert a looming crisis, according to the Economic Survey presented by Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman.
The South Asian nation should introduce improved irrigation methods, use technologies and change cropping patterns to reduce the use of ground water, of which 89 percent is extracted for irrigation purposes, the survey said.
India is one of the world’s biggest users of ground water and its depleting levels are the main reason for the country’s severe shortages.
About 600 million Indians are facing high-to-extreme water stress and the situation is set to worsen as water requirements rise, according to a 2018 report by NITI Aayog, the government’s policy making body.
About 75 percent of the households in the country do not have drinking water, it said. India is already facing a severe water crisis, with about 60 percent of the country having received deficient rainfall, according to India Meteorological Department.
One of the key reasons for the shrinking ground water level is the cropping pattern, which is skewed towards crops that use more water.
Rice and sugarcane crops together consume more than 60 percent of water available for irrigation. India also lacks a proper structure on support prices and subsidies to discourage farmers from growing water-intensive crops, the survey said.

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