As
drought looms in India, fear for its cattle
Armed
with the latest monsoon rainfall data, weather experts finally
conceded this month that India is facing a drought, confirming what
millions of livestock farmers around the country had known for weeks.
13
August, 2012
For
over three months, even state agencies have been providing free
fodder to those most vulnerable to a shortfall in India's annual
monsoon -- farmers who eke a living out of small landholdings and the
milk provided by cattle.
At
the end of April, Bhimrao Chavan and his wife abandoned their land in
western India and headed for a camp that doubles as a centre for the
provision of free fodder. Their scrawny cattle and a couple of goats
amble around a hut made of straw, leaves and plastic sheeting that
Chavan and his family share.
At
first, there was just a handful of families at the makeshift
settlement on the outskirts of a small town some 320 km (200 miles)
southeast of Mumbai in the state of Maharashtra. But as the monsoon
rains failed to show week after week through June and July, turning
fields across the region from luscious green to parched white, the
numbers there swelled.
Today,
the Mhaswad settlement has the air of a refugee camp, teeming with
some 6,500 people and nearly twice as many animals: cows, bullocks
and goats that would have gone for slaughter or faced starvation had
they not made the journey.
"The
most important thing for me is keeping my cattle alive as that is my
only source of income. Without them we can't survive," said
40-year-old Chavan as he cut sugarcane into small pieces for his
cattle in the early morning sunlight.
India
is heavily dependent on the capricious annual monsoon, which brings
about 75 p ercent of the rainfall that the country receives, to
irrigate crops and fill its reservoirs.
Although
agriculture accounts for just 14 percent of the economy's output, a
successful monsoon can be life-changing for some 600 million people -
half of the population - who depend on farming for a livelihood.
Monsoon failures have led to millions of deaths over the past century
and buffeted the economy.
DEVASTATING
BLOW
Just
over halfway through this season, the rains are 17 percent below
normal, and the weather office has forecast that the El Nino weather
pattern will bring more disappointment in the few weeks that remain.
The
drought, India's first since 2009, will not bring a shortage of
staples as the nation's grain stores are overflowing with rice and
wheat, and sugar output is set to exceed demand for a third straight
year.
But
it will deal a devastating blow to grain crops used for animal feed.
That would badly hit the vast majority of the country's farmers who -
with cattle and small landholdings their only assets - struggle to
survive at the best of times.
Monsoon
failures are so threatening that the government keeps a "Drought
Manual". In this weighty document, "cattle wealth" is
described as the mainstay of the rural economy, but it is precarious
because when seriously depleted its recovery is very slow, with
stocks growing at just 1-2 percent a year.
Chavan's
family of 12 is typical: their annual income is usually around 90,000
rupees ($1,640), a tiny enough sum, but this year it will be even
lower because there has not been enough rain to plant crops on their
3 acres (1.2 hectares) of land at the village of Pulkoti not far from
the fodder camp. Neighbours who did sow have seen their crops wither
and die.
"Until
next year we will only get money by selling milk," said Chavan's
wife, Lilabai, as she stood barefoot in the dusty camp as farmers
around her milked their cows and collected dung for fuel and manure.
"We
were thinking of selling our livestock because we didn't have money
to buy fodder. Fortunately, the camp was started, otherwise by now
our animals would have been slaughtered."
RIPPLE
EFFECT ACROSS COMMUNITIES
The
government has promised to provide all vulnerable farmers with animal
feed. But Maharashtra is not the only state hit hard by the drought -
the others are Punjab, Haryana and Rajasthan in the north, Gujarat in
the west and Karnataka in the south - and, saddled with sharply
slowing economic growth and a yawning fiscal gap, the government will
be hard-pressed to deliver.
Indeed,
there are very few camps like the one at Mhaswad in Maharashtra, and
fodder prices have surged on short-supply.
Just
50 km (30 miles) away, for example, Rajesh Hanmantrao Deshmukh has
taken a 60,000 rupee ($1,100) loan to buy fodder for his 10
buffaloes. In a good year he would expect to earn 100,000 rupees
($1,800), but this year he expects to lose that much.
"Keeping
buffaloes is now a loss-making business," Deshmukh said as he
bought cane from a state-subsidised depot. "I used to get fodder
from my farm but this year the farms are empty."
Others
cannot get loans, which has led to distress selling of livestock for
slaughter - and, with it, a drop in prices.
This
year's disaster will have a ripple effect across rural communities of
Maharashtra, forcing many to migrate from the hardscrabble hinterland
to the financial capital, Mumbai.
"Nothing
has changed in rural areas despite all the progress. When drought
strikes, young people have to migrate," said Ashok Galande, a
resident of Pulkoti village who sold his pair of bullocks during a
drought in 1972 and moved to Mumbai.
"Drought
cripples everything at the village. In big cities you can find work
for a livelihood," said Galande, who has found life tough since
returning to his rural roots last year.
To
generate employment, the state government is trying to expand the
scope of a national job guarantee scheme, but many local businesses
that rely on farmers are suffering already.
"Sales
are only five percent of normal," grumbled seed and fertiliser
seller Janardan Narle in Mhaswad. "Why would farmers buy seeds,
fertilisers or pesticides when there is no rainfall?"
Cloth
merchant Amar Rokade's takings have dropped by about 60 percent this
monsoon season and he has sacked two of his three workers, while
motor-cycle dealer Sanjay Bhagwat says his sales have fallen by 50
percent.
They
are both worried that worse is to come in the months ahead when,
normally, they would be enjoying brisk sales during the Hindu
festivals of Dusshera and Diwali.
"If
the rains fail in the next two months in our areas, then it will
hammer our festival-season sales," said Bhagwat. ($1 = 55 Indian
rupees) (Editing by John Chalmers and Raju Gopalakrishnan)
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