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General Studies 3 >> Science & Technology

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PUSA-44

PUSA-44 PADDY VARIETY

 
1. Context
Punjab Chief Minister Bhagwant Singh Mann announced on Wednesday (October 4 2023) that the state will ban the cultivation of the PUSA-44 paddy variety from next year onwards
 
2. What is PUSA-44?
  • PUSA-44 was developed in 1993 by the Delhi-based Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR).
  • Subsequently, Punjab’s farmers started sowing it in a few areas initially. After getting a high yield from the crops, they started increasing the area under PUSA-44 by multiplying the seed
  • PUSA-44 is a semi-dwarf indica rice variety developed by the Indian Agricultural Research Institute (IARI) in New Delhi, India.
  • It was released in 1988 and quickly became one of the most popular rice varieties in the country, due to its high yield potential and good grain quality.
  • PUSA-44 is a long-duration variety, taking around 160 days to mature. It is a medium-height plant with sturdy culms and long, slender grains.
  • PUSA-44 is known for its good milling and cooking qualities, and is popular among both consumers and millers.

3.PUSA-44 compared with other Varieties

Farmers claim that PUSA-44 yields nearly 85 to 100 mann (34 to 40 quintals) per acre, while other varieties’ yield average is 28 to 30 quintals per acre.

Many farmers are able to get a yield of 36 to 40 quintals per acre with PUSA-44 if the weather is favourable. Currently, the Minimum Support Prince (MSP) offered for paddy is Rs 2,205 per quintal, so if it yields farmers 7-10 quintals more than the other varieties, then it will add to their income by Rs 15,000 to 22,000 per acre

4.Challenges

  • By the end of 2010s, it had gained widespread popularity among farmers across the Punjab, covering approximately 70 to 80% of the area under paddy cultivation
  • By 2018, the Punjab government reduced the area under PUSA-44 to 18 per cent of the total area under paddy, but it rebounded to 22 per cent last year.
  • According to the Agriculture Department, in the previous year, 7.74 lakh hectares (19.12 lakh acres) of paddy were under Pusa-44, out of a total non-Basmati paddy area of 26.61 lakh hectares.
  • PUSA-44 is a long-duration variety, taking around 160 days to mature. This is around 35 to 40 days more than other varieties, requiring 5-6 extra cycles of irrigation.
  • With Punjab facing severe groundwater depletion and the availability of short-duration paddy varieties, the government aims to conserve one month of irrigation water by banning the variety
  • Additionally, the area under paddy, a water-intensive crop to begin with, continues to grow in the state. As many as 102 of the state’s 141 agricultural development blocks were declared ‘dark zones’, in which the rate of groundwater depletion exceeded the rate of recharge, and the water was available at depths of 200 to 300 feet or more – extractable only by using deep tube wells
 
Source: indianexpress

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