Agricultural Engineering for Future-Ready Indian Farming

Syllabus: GS3/ Agriculture

Context

  • Indian agriculture is increasingly shaped by climate variability, and rising input costs, making agricultural engineering a crucial driver of efficiency, sustainability, and resilience in the sector.

What is Agricultural Engineering?

  • Agricultural engineering involves the application of engineering principles, scientific knowledge, and technological innovations to improve agricultural productivity and sustainability.
  • It is distinct from agronomy (which deals with crop science) in that its focus is on the systems, tools, and infrastructure that enable farming rather than the biology of crops themselves.
  • It operates across four broad domains: farm mechanisation, soil and water conservation, post-harvest engineering, and precision/digital agriculture.

Role of Agricultural Engineering in Modernising Indian Agriculture

  • Enhancing Farm Productivity: Use of tractors, seed drills, planters, harvesters, and laser land levellers improves operational efficiency.
    • Farm mechanisation boosts productivity by 12–15%, reduces cultivation costs by 20%, and cuts sowing labour by 60–70% (NITI Aayog).
  • Water Resource Management: Technologies such as drip irrigation, sprinkler systems, and fertigation ensure optimal water usage.
    • Moisture sensors and automated irrigation systems prevent overuse and improve crop health.
  • Strengthening Soil Management: Engineering solutions such as bunding, terracing, drainage systems, and erosion control preserve soil fertility.
  • Reducing Post-Harvest Losses: India loses agricultural produce worth over ₹1.5 lakh crore every year due to inefficiencies in storage, transportation, processing, and supply chain management.
    • Engineering solutions like cold chains can cut post-harvest wastage by up to 75%.
  • Promoting Precision and Smart Agriculture: Use of drones, sensors, GPS-based machinery, and satellite data enables real-time farm monitoring.
    • Precision technologies improve fertiliser efficiency by 12–15% and reduce pesticide use by ~20% (ICAR, Economic Survey 2024–25).
  • Climate Resilience: Precision irrigation, weather-indexed sensors, and drone-based crop monitoring help farmers adapt to erratic rainfall and heat stress.
    • Conservation tillage equipment (zero-till drills, Happy Seeders) reduces soil erosion, retains soil moisture, and curbs stubble burning — a triple environmental dividend.
    • Advances in biotechnology, including climate-resilient crop varieties, genome editing, and biocontrol solutions, complement precision agriculture by enhancing productivity, sustainability, and resilience.

Challenges in Adoption of Agricultural Engineering

  • High Capital Costs: Advanced machinery and smart technologies involve high initial investments, making them inaccessible for small and marginal farmers.
    • Limited access to institutional credit and inadequate subsidy coverage further restrict adoption.
  • Status of Agriculture Mechanization: India’s farm mechanisation level stands at approximately 40–45%, far behind the US (95%), Brazil (75%), and China (57%).
    • As of 2024, India’s overall farm mechanisation stands at 47%, with the highest mechanisation seen in seed-bed preparation (70%), while harvesting and threshing lag at 34%.
    • Mechanisation is highly uneven — it remains concentrated in Punjab, Haryana and other Green Revolution states
  • Low Technical Awareness: Farmers often lack the technical knowledge required to operate and maintain modern equipment.
    • Weak agricultural extension systems limit the dissemination of best practices and innovations at the grassroots level.
  • Fragmented Landholdings: About 84% of holdings are below 1 hectare — making individual machinery ownership economically unviable and CHC-based rental the only realistic model for most farmers.
  • Lack of land consolidation hinders the efficient use of high-capacity machinery and precision technologies.
  • Infrastructural and Institutional Gaps: Inadequate rural infrastructure, including storage facilities, cold chains, rural roads, and reliable electricity, constrains the benefits of technological adoption.
    • Weak market linkages and supply chain inefficiencies limit the full realisation of gains from improved production.

Key Government Policies and Schemes

  • Pradhan Mantri Krishi Sinchayee Yojana (PMKSY): Promotes “More Crop Per Drop” — integrates drip, sprinkler, and micro-irrigation engineering into a national mission for water use efficiency.
  • Namo Drone Didi: Targets deployment of 14,500 drones to women SHGs by 2025–26, primarily for pesticide and fertiliser spraying, with subsidies of up to ₹8 lakh or 80% cost — whichever is less.
  • PM Dhan-Dhaanya Krishi Yojana (Budget 2025–26): Focuses mechanisation, irrigation, and post-harvest support on 100 low-productivity districts.
  • FARMS App: The government’s FARMS (Farm Machinery Solutions) mobile app digitises CHC booking and connects farmers to over 26,000 service providers, reducing search costs and idle time. 
  • Agricultural Engineering Directorates: A Parliamentary Committee has recommended establishing Directorates of Agricultural Engineering in each state to implement mechanisation policy; currently such directorates exist only in Madhya Pradesh and Tamil Nadu.

Way Ahead

  • Promote inclusive mechanisation through Expand Custom Hiring Centres (CHCs) and equipment rental models. Encourage Farmer Producer Organisations (FPOs) to collectively own and manage farm equipment.
  • Last-Mile Delivery of Technology: Improve agricultural extension services through digital platforms, mobile-based advisories, and on-field demonstrations.
    • Deploy trained “agri-tech facilitators” at the village level to assist farmers in using modern equipment.
  • Smallholder-Centric Innovations: Promote development of low-cost, small-scale, and region-specific machinery suited for fragmented landholdings.
  • Institutional Support: Ensure better convergence of schemes such as Sub-Mission on Agricultural Mechanisation, Pradhan Mantri Krishi Sinchayee Yojana, and PM-KUSUM for holistic farm development.

Source: TH

 

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