By Rajendra Jadhav
Poor rains in India's key pulse-producing
southern and western states have affected sowing and could trim output in the
2012-13 year that began on July 1, the agriculture minister said on Friday.
Lower output of pulses could force India, the
world's largest producer and consumer, to import more lentils thereby adding to
inflation woes.
India, the world's leading importer of
lentils, consumes over 20 million tonnes of assorted lentils, or pulses, but
production is less than that and the gap is met through imports from Australia,
Canada and Myanmar.
Maharashtra, Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh
received poor rains in June, which is crucial for the plantation of the pulses.
Since sowing has been delayed, it will affect the production of pulses in
2012-13, farm minister Sharad Pawar told reporters on the sidelines of a
conference.
Pulses are a staple in the Indian diet. They
contribute 0.72 percent to India's inflation, which at 7.55 percent currently
is worrying the government at a time of slowing economic growth.
The June-September monsoon rains, the main
source of water for 55 percent of India's arable land, were 30 percent lower-t
han-normal since the beginning of the monsoon season.
India's 1.2 billion people make it one of the
world's biggest consumers of rice, sugar and grains. While it is usually
self-sufficient in these foodstuff, the country is a major importer of pulses
and edible oils.
"I see the situation is not worrisome
for paddy as of now," Pawar said.
The shortage of rains should not have a big
impact on rice planting in the states like Punjab and Haryana, the major
contributors to government granaries, where about 93 percent of arable land is
irrigated.
Among the key rice-producing eastern states,
Odisha and Chattisgarh had received sufficient rains, Pawar said.
India in recent years has produced bumper
harvests of rice, a staple food for many Indians and handed out at subsidised
rates to the country's half a billion poor. In 2011 bulging stocks prompted the
government to allow exports of the staple.
The country could emerge as the world's
second-largest rice exporter this year after Thailand.
The farm sector accounts for about 15 percent
of a nearly $2 trillion economy, Asia's third-biggest, where good harvests are
crucial to maintain rural incomes and thereby keep up the demand for gold and
consumer goods.
(Reporting by Rajendra Jadhav; Writting by
Deepak Sharma; Editing by Gopakumar Warrier)
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