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Agricultural Subsidies & Air Pollution

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November 25, 2020

What is the issue?

  • Our current system of subsidies is a big reason for air pollution.
  • So, some changes could be made in the subsidies of the power, fertilizer and procurement fronts.

What is the situation?

  • People in Delhi and Indo-Gangetic Plain are choking due to air pollution.
  • As winter dawns, the wind slows, temperatures drop, and suspended particulate matter (PM) accumulates.
  • The high pollution in Delhi and its surrounding is due to the congested traffic, dust, construction, waste burning, etc,
  • It gets a top-up from paddy-stubble burning in Punjab, Haryana and Western Uttar Pradesh.

What contributes to air pollution?

  • Agriculture’s contribution to air pollution runs even deeper than what happens between crop seasons.
  • Atmospheric ammonia comes from fertiliser use, animal husbandry, and other agricultural practices.
  • This combined with emissions from power plants, transportation, and other fossil fuel burning form fine particles.
  • Agriculture is a victim of pollution as well as a perpetrator.
  • Particulate matter and ground-level ozone (from industrial, power plant, and transportation emissions among others) cause losses in crop yields.
  • Ozone damages plant cells, handicapping photosynthesis, while particulate matter dims the sunlight that reaches crops.

What is the irony?

  • The irony of agricultural pollution is that taxpayers are essentially paying for it through a system of subsidies.
  • These subsidies motivate the very behaviors that drive the agricultural emissions that the taxpayers breathe.

How does subsidy contribute to air pollution?

  • Free power - hence “free” water, pumped from the ground - is a big part of what makes growing rice in these areas attractive.
  • Open-ended procurement of paddy, in spite of bulging stocks of grains with the Food Corporation of India, adds to the incentives.
  • Subsidies account for almost 15% of the value of rice being produced in Punjab-Haryana belt.
  • Fertiliser, particularly urea in granular form, is highly subsidised.
  • Urea is one of the cheapest forms of nitrogen-based fertiliser, but it is also one of the first to release ammonia into the air.
  • This loss of nitrogen leads to a cycle of more and more fertiliser being applied to get the intended benefits for crops.

What could be done?

  • An important element to correct in the policy matrix is the policy of subsidies on power, fertilisers and procurement.
  • The nature of support to farmers should be shifted from input subsidies to investment subsidies.
  • A diversification package, equally contributed by the Centre and states, may be done to reduce agricultural pollution.
  • The approach to diversification has to be demand-led, with a holistic framework of value chain, and not just focused on production.
  • On the fertiliser front, instead of massive subsidisation of urea, the farmers could be given an input subsidy in cash on per hectare basis.
  • Government procurement of paddy from farmers burning stubble in their fields may also be restricted.
  • Taken together, these measures could double farmers’ incomes, promote efficiency in resource use, and reduce pollution.

 

Source: Financial Express

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