Emerging Agricultural Realignment Towards Millets

Syllabus: GS3/ Agriculture

Context

  • The Iran-West Asia conflict, possible weak monsoon, and fertiliser supply uncertainties are driving Indian farmers towards low-input, climate-resilient crops such as millets.

Current Factors Affecting Indian Agriculture

  • Fertiliser Supply: India is heavily dependent on imports for phosphatic and potassic fertilisers.
    • Geopolitical tensions in West Asia and disruptions around the Strait of Hormuz may affect fertiliser availability and prices.
    • Petroleum-based chemical inputs used in pesticide formulations may also become costlier.
  • Weak monsoon: Fears of a below-normal monsoon may adversely affect kharif sowing and crop productivity.
    • Weak rainfall conditions can increase irrigation stress and groundwater extraction.
  • Chain Uncertainty: Ongoing geopolitical tensions have disrupted global commodity and shipping markets.
    • Higher freight and logistics costs may affect agricultural input imports.

Existing issues in Indian Agriculture

  • Risks in Cotton Cultivation:
    • Cotton farmers in Haryana, Punjab, and Rajasthan are facing severe damage from pink bollworm (Gulabi sundi).
    • Cotton cultivation requires multiple pesticide sprays and high fertiliser use, increasing production costs.
    • Rising labour costs for cotton picking have further reduced profitability.
  • Concern over water intensive crops: Weak monsoon conditions increase the cultivation risks associated with water-intensive crops such as rice, sugarcane thereby encouraging a shift towards drought-resilient millets.

Why Are Farmers Shifting Towards Millets?

  • Millets Require Lower Inputs: Millets are less dependent on costly imported fertilisers such as DAP and potash, making them more economical during periods of global supply disruptions.
  • Climate Resilience: Millets are drought-resistant and can withstand high temperatures and erratic rainfall conditions. 
  • Flexible Cropping Pattern: Bajra has a shorter crop duration of nearly 90–95 days and farmers can cultivate additional crops such as mustard and summer moong after harvesting bajra.
    • Millets improve land-use efficiency and help increase annual farm income.

What are Millets?

  • Millets are a group of small grained cereal food crops popularly known as Nutri-cereals.
  • Varieties: Multiple varieties of millets are produced such as Pearl Millets, Sorghum, Finger Millet, Foxtail, Kodo, Barnyard, Proso, Little Millet and Pseudo Millets like Buckwheat and Amaranths.

Millet Production in India

  • India is the largest producer of millets in the world. It produced a total of 180.15 lakh tonnes of millets in 2024–25. 
  • The major millet producing states in India are Rajasthan, Karnataka, Maharashtra, Uttar Pradesh, Haryana, Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh and Uttarakhand.

Condition for Millets Cultivation

  • Climate: The Millets are grown in tropical as well as subtropical up to an altitude of 2,100 m.
    • A mean temperature range of 26-29°c during the growth is best for proper development and good crop yield. 
  • Soil: Millet has wide adaptability to different soil from very poor to very fertile and can tolerate a certain degree of alkalinity.
    • The best soils are alluvial, loamy and sandy soil with good drainage.

Challenges in Millet Expansion

  • Weak Procurement and Market Infrastructure: Procurement systems for millets remain weaker than those for rice and wheat with underdeveloped  storage, processing, and value-chain infrastructure.
  • Consumer Preference: Public consumption patterns favouring rice and wheat, Limited awareness and inadequate branding constrain millet demand.
  • Policy Bias: Existing subsidy structures and procurement systems favour paddy and wheat cultivation, as farmers often receive stronger institutional support for conventional cereals.

Steps taken by India to promote millet production

  • International Year of Millets: India spearheaded the UN General Assembly Resolution for declaring the year 2023 as the ‘International Year of Millets’.
  • Higher Minimum Support Prices (MSP): To encourage farmers to take up millet cultivation, higher MSP to Jowar, Bajra and Ragi has been announced.
  • National Food Security Mission – Nutri Cereals: The Department of Agriculture and Farmers Welfare is running a Sub-Mission on Nutri-Cereals comprising various millets under the National Food Security Mission.
  • Production Linked Incentive Scheme for Millet-Based Products (PLISMBP) was introduced to encourage-
    • The use of millets in branded Ready‑to‑Eat (RTE) and Ready‑to‑Cook (RTC) products.
    • To encourage value addition in millet-based food items.
    • To connect millet growers with food processors by boosting production demand for the grain.

Concluding remarks

  • The convergence of geopolitical uncertainty and monsoon risks is pushing Indian agriculture towards more sustainable cropping patterns. 
  • The momentum created by the International Year of Millets may now translate into large-scale adoption of millets as economically viable and climate-resilient crops. 
  • With effective procurement support and policy backing, 2026 could become a defining year for millet-based agricultural transformation in India.

Source: IE

 
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