Increasing
soil fertility, avoiding stubble burning
Upon
reaching Anirudh Vashisht’s farm in Sunam in Sangrur district in
Punjab, a couple of other people with a camera could be seen. They
had come to document the work of farmers like Vashisht who are
setting an example, at a time when Punjab’s farmers have had to
bear the brunt of criticism from the capital for stubble burning and
adding to air pollution. Vashisht is part of the minority in Punjab
that does not burn crop residue.
The
documentarians talking to him had primarily come to film instances of
stubble burning. To avoid doing it himself, something which leads to
pollution, causes accidents by reducing visibility and harms the
soil, Vashisht has been practising mulching. In the process, the
stubble is cut and collected, and the small pieces are spread over
the soil. While explaining the process, Vashisht took a few handfuls
of chopped straw and covered the onion and garlic patches with them:
“When we burn stubble, we lose microbes healthy for the soil;
friendly insects die. Birds and animals also get injured. But with
mulching the number of useful microorganisms grows. The soil is
protected from the direct sun, its health is preserved and since it
is able to retain moisture the ground needs less water. That’s why
this process is climate smart.” Chasing away a parrot that had come
for the fruit of a tree on the farm, Anirudh gave the example of a
forest where grass and leaves cover the soil and it remains fertile
despite anyone watering it.
Some
farmers who can afford the machine use a rotavator for mechanically
spreading the stubble on to the soil but most land owners believe
that doing it manually has better results. But isn’t the manual
process of mulching labour intensive? “It is,” Vashisht agrees,
“but it is a long term investment.” Mulching increases soil
fertility and yield and therefore ultimately it would be profitable.
Seema
Jolly in Karodan village, Mohali, also prefers to put in human labour
in the process of mulching because she does not find the use of big
machines consistent with her organic farming practices and
principles.
In
Barnala’s Pharwahi village, Ravdeep, who is also into organic
farming, recalled that even when he was a regular farmer using
chemical fertilisers he did not feel comfortable with burning and
still used mulching.
For
his farm near Kapurthala, Rahul Sharma bought straw from his
neighbours to mulch: “Once the soil is covered with the straw, it
becomes dark and damp, encouraging the growth of earthworms, which
are healthy for soil. If wheat needs to irrigated thrice, then with
mulching only two rounds are enough.”
There
have come to light other uses for the stubble that comes after a
paddy harvest, instead of burning it and adding to climate change. It
is being used for power
generation,
by the paper and packaging industry and, possibly, for furniture.
Why
hasn’t mulching become popular in the state yet?
Shamser
Singh is a farmer in Sunam. Asked about why he is unable to adopt
practices like mulching, he shares: “Machines like happy seeders
[machines that cut the straw, sow the next crop and puts the cut
stubble over the sown area] and rotavators that should be priced at
thousands cost lakhs. How are we supposed to buy them? The 50 percent
subsidy is not enough.”
Farmers
complained that labour is scarce, especially since many have been
absorbed by NREGA (National Rural Employment Guarantee Act) works,
and turn out to be expensive for the farmers if employed in huge
numbers.
Another
farmer, Parpoor Singh, adds, “We also suffer from the effects if
stubble burning, from breathing difficulties to burning in the eyes.
But what are the options? Let the government subsidise the growing
diesel prices so we can use machines to clear the fields of the
stubble.”
Time
is also a factor. To reduce water use, the government has shifted the
rice sowing time further ahead. This means that as soon as farmers
harvest paddy, they have to clear the field and sow wheat. In such a
scenario, mulching seems time-taking compared to burning the straw.
Some farmers also believe that mulching makes the soil uneven and
prone to attacks by rodents. But the farmers implementing this
practice, including Vashist, saw it more as a prejudice. Buying the
straw for commercial use by private parties is not widespread yet.
A
few of the residents living around farms said that the pollution
around has decreased since the government started imposing a penalty
on burning. But this measure could not stop the practice at a larger
scale. It led to resentment in the agricultural community against
what they see as government’s apathy to their problems.
Farmers
across different districts reiterated that they would prefer not to
burn the residual straw if the government helps them fight the
factors above through cash incentives. Agriculture expert Devinder
Sharma agreed, “You cannot remedy this through punitive action.
Cash is what the farmers want in the form of an incentive and that is
what should be given to them.”
Most
farmers using mulching consistently are also those who are doing
organic farming and therefore have an overall, larger vision of how
agricultural practices should not adversely affect plant, human,
animal or environmental health in general. But both organic farmers
and experts admit that for the farmers relying heavily on chemicals
and under the pressure to get high yields quickly for financial
returns, the shift to organic farming, of which mulching is already a
part, will also have to be incentivised by the government, especially
in the transitional phase.
This
article is being published as part of the GIZ-CMS fellowship. First published in DailyO, 30 Nov 2018.
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