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How govt's apathy is hurting potato farmers

March 22, 2019 08:30 IST

From output surge to lack of cold storage, not much attention has been given to the potato farmers.

The export market, too, is bleak, due to unsuitable domestic varieties and an underdeveloped food processing value chain.

Potato farmers are facing a pricing crisis, and a number of factors are contributing to it.

“When I had forayed into the cold storage business in 1998, the retail price of potato in Uttar Pradesh was around Rs 20 a kg.

"These are still around the same level and sometimes lower,” says Agra-based Rajesh Goyal, acting president of the Federation of Cold Storage Associations of India.

 

In these 20 years, he adds, farm input costs for potato have doubled from Rs 3 a kg to Rs 7-8 a kg.

Potato sees record production year after year but falling realisation for farmers.

And, the export market is bleak, due to unsuitable domestic varieties and an underdeveloped food processing value chain.

Farmers willing to store more in cold storages find no space.

The price at Agra's wholesale market has been Rs 5-6 a kg since January 2017, except for the April to November period when it is Rs 10-15.

Since 2005, it is only in November 2014 that wholesale prices have gone above Rs 20 a kilo.

Not much attention has been given to farmers of potato, grown on 2.18 million hectares.

Three-fourth of the crop is from only five states -- Uttar Pradesh, West Bengal, Bihar, Gujarat and Madhya Pradesh.

The central government's minimum support price (MSP) is Rs 5.5 a kg in UP and Bengal, the top two producers.

This, farmers say, does not cover even the production cost.

The cold storage levy is Rs 2.5 a kg.

Many a time, farmers do not bother to even come to a cold storage to take delivery of their commodity, since the transport cost would be steeper than what the produce would fetch in the wholesale market (mandi).

In 2018-19, production was estimated at 52 million tonnes (mt) and consumption at 32 mt.

The current season is again expected to see over-production.

Prices apart, the storage facilities are already full, say growers.

“The easiest way to support growers is to promote the export market, by cultivating varieties in demand in the key markets of Europe, Russia, etc,” says Indian Horticulture Exporters' Association president Ajit Shah.

He says there has been no government action on their earlier suggestions.

For instance, he says, Russia is a big potato buyer.

However, "it requires a certificate from the country of origin that the consignment is free from contamination and was grown in a contamination-free environment.

"This certification is not being provided by the Indian authorities, when we could export 50,000 tonnes a year to Russia," he says.

UP and Bengal account for nearly 32 and 23 per cent, respectively, of total production.

Followed by Bihar and Gujarat at 15 and seven per cent.

The crop's arrival in the market gains momentum in January and peaks during March, which is when farmers stock in cold storages, expecting better prices in the coming months.

Kolkata-based potato trader and cold storage owner Patit Paban Dey says there is an urgent need to increase the per capita consumption in southern India, where it is well below the national average at less than 20 kg a year.

He also points to the dismal state of food processing.

Processors, including makers of potato chips, are big buyers.

Last year, the UP government had said it would procure 100,000 tonnes directly from farmers under the MSP; actual procurement was 13,000 tonnes and there was selling by growers at sub-MSP prices.

The state's annual crop size is 15.5 million tonnes.

Goyal suggests the MSP window be open for at least nine months, so that prices do not crash, resulting in losses for both farmers and cold storages.

“The MSP should also be higher." And, of course, the procurement.

At present, the government of Bengal has said it would procure a million tonnes at the MSP of Rs 5.5 a kg, to improve the market sentiment.

The state's crop is pegged at 11 mt.

Photograph: Jitendra Prakash/Reuters

Virendra Singh Rawat in Lucknow
Source: source image