Dr. A. P. J. Abdul Kalam
President of India
SPECIAL ADDRESS DURING THE NATIONAL SYMPOSIUM TO
COMMEMORATE 60TH YEAR OF INDEPENDENCE 'AGRICULTURE CANNOT WAIT: NEW
HORIZONS', NASC COMPLEX, NEW DELHI
05-06-2007: New Delhi
Innovate to Empower Agriculture
"Innovation is the key for non-linear growth"
I am delighted to participate in the National
Symposium entitled "Agriculture Cannot Wait: New Horizons" to
commemorate the 60th year of Independence organized by National
Academy of Agricultural Sciences, on the World Environment Day. My
greetings to Agricultural Scientists, Science planners, Science
administrators and distinguished Guests. In this audience, I would
like to discuss the topic "Innovate to empower the Agriculture".
Ambience in the Nation
In the Indian history, very rarely our nation has come across a
situation, all at a time, an ascending economic trajectory,
continuously rising foreign exchange reserve, reduced rate of
inflation, global recognition of the technological competence,
energy of 540 million youth, umbilical connectivities of 22 million
people of Indian origin in various parts of the planet, and the
interest shown by many developed countries to invest in our
engineers and scientists including setting up of new R&D centers in
India. The distinction between the public and the private sectors
and the illusory primacy of one over the other is vanishing. India
as the largest democracy in the world has a reputation for its
democracy and for providing leadership for the one billion people
with multi-cultural, multi-language and multi-religious backgrounds.
And also our technological competence and value systems with
civilizational heritage are highly respected. Foreign Institutional
Investors are finding investing in India attractive. Indians are
also investing in abroad and opening new business ventures. Indian
economy is growing with an average annual growth rate of 9% GDP.
However, agriculture needs mission mode growth in development and
production.
Economic development: Transforming India
into a developed nation
There is a need to lift up the economic conditions and lifestyle of
over 220 million people out of the one billion plus population. One
of the reasons for this situation is that large part of the growth
comes from manufacturing and services sector. The agriculture has
been growing just at 1.8%. If we have to uplift the 220 million
people living below poverty line and provide improved quality of
life, we have to ensure that the agriculture sector grows at least
at 4% per annum. For providing this growth, we have to spread the
development process to the rural sector. That is what the PURA
(Providing Urban Amenities in Rural Areas) programme involving 4
connectivities namely Physical, Electronic and Knowledge leading to
Economic connectivity envisages. 7000 PURA Clusters encompassing
over 600,000 villages are required for the entire country. The theme
of PURA, apart from concentrating on reinforcing agriculture, will
emphasize on agro processing, development of Rural Craftsmanship,
dairy, fishing, poultry, silk production, so that the non-farm
revenue for the rural sector is enhanced, based on the core
competence of the region. Also the rural economy will be driven by
renewable energy such as solar, wind, bio-fuel and conversion of
municipal waste into power. In this approach, the aim is to make
sustainable development using the core competence of the rural
sector.
Operational PURA in the Country
I have witnessed integrated development in five places in the
country, where PURA is not only energizing in agriculture, but also
enabling people to take up alternative employment including food
processing, craftsmanship and small-scale industries. For example,
Periyar PURA in Vallam, Thanjavur is engaged in agriculture, solar
energy, skill development and now one product one village scheme.
Chitrakoot PURA has mobilized the core-competence of the rural
communities in herbal cultivation and leading to medicine and is
working towards a conflict free society. Byrraju PURA in Andhra
Pradesh has enabled reverse migration of BPO personnel from
Hyderabad to Bhimavaram, Loni PURA in Maharashtra has provided over
all upliftment of the rural population in sugarcane cultivation,
sugar production, education and health care including reduction in
IMR and MMR. MS Swaminathan Research Foundation has been playing a
pioneering role in rural development through NVA Fellows drawn from
various walks of life based on their core competence, who provide
knowledge input to the farmers in the farm and non-farm sectors
across the country. MSSRF is also in the process of establishing
PURA in the tsunami affected region of Nagapattinam, Tamilnadu. Now
I would like to mention above one village one product scheme being
implemented in Periyar PURA.
One Village One Product and PURA
The members of Periyar PURA in Vallam, Thanjavur district in Tamil
Nadu have created a strategic partnership with Japan External Trade
Organization (JETRO) of Japan. During the last eight months people
of Periyar PURA villages technologically supported by Periyar
Maniammai College of Engineering for Women have worked with experts
from JETRO on various products for which core competence and raw
material is available in Thanjavur district. They developed proto
types for 123 products such as bed sheets, table runner, cushion
cover, brass drum, curtains, bread basket etc. Interaction with
JETRO specialists included comparison of Japanese product,
discussion on raw material selection, technical advice on product
development and final quality inspection. Based on this intensive
interaction, Vallam people produced 123 products and JETRO selected
40 out of them for international market.
These 40 finalized products were displayed in an
exhibition at New Delhi during February 2007 and they are being
taken for display in Interior Lifestyle 2007 Exhibition at Tokyo to
be held between 6th and 8th June 2007. The feedback from each
exhibition has been used for improving the product so that the
customer acceptability of the product gets enhanced. The local
technical consultancy support for improving the product has been
provided by Periyar Maniammai College of Engineering for Women. This
co-operative venture has enhanced the innovative ability of the
village people and transformed them to develop and produce
internationally acceptable products. Once the product is finally
accepted in the interior lifestyle exhibition, it will be converted
as a commercial business proposition which will enhance the economic
activity in all the 65 villages in the Periyar PURA rural cluster.
How do we achieve 4% growth in GDP in the
Agriculture sector from the present less than 2% growth rate? In our
country, there are few models which I would like to share with you.
Doubling the food production - an Experience
I would like to narrate an excellent success story which has taken
place in Bihar. An experiment has been carried out by the TIFAC team
in Bihar, in the RP Channel 5 and Majholi distributory and later
extended to Paliganj and other 5 distributaries on the request of
farmers. Today they are working systems. The productivity of paddy
has increased in these villages from 2 tons per hectare to 4 - 5.8
tons per hectare and in respect of wheat productivity; it has
increased from around 2 tonnes per hactare to around 4-5 tonnes per
hectare. Presently, paddy and wheat crops are spread in an area
greater than 2500 hectares involving 3000 farmers. This project has
been carried out by the TIFAC, in collaboration with a farmer's
co-operative society, Indian Agricultural Research Institute (IARI)
and the agricultural university in Pusa, Bihar. Using scientific
method of farming involving soil characterization, matching the
right seed to soil, seeding in time, fertilizer and pesticide
selection, water management, pre and post harvesting methodology
productivity has been more than doubled. I am explaining this model
to bring out the feasibility of transferring the knowledge from the
laboratory to the farm through a cooperative venture between a
dedicated team of scientists and the farmers. Moving up the value
chain in agriculture through food processing is essential in the
country to increase the contribution of the agriculture work force
to GDP. This will result in doubling the earning capacity of the
farm workers in any region of the country.
Partnership between scientists and farmers
for higher productivity and income
For realizing the enhanced productivity thereby earning capacity,
what is needed is the creation of a core team of agriculture
scientists, veterinary scientists and commerce graduates in all the
rural locations, who can provide the knowledge inputs to the farmers
as has been done through the TIFAC project. This team can be linked
to an educational institution in the rural sector, an active DRDA,
Joint Director Agriculture available in the districts. For enhancing
the productivity to over 100 million hectares in the country, we
would need deployment of 50,000 young Agriculture Scientists (B.Sc
Agri graduates) at the grass root level in the Agricultural Service
Centers who will be responsible for identifying the technology gap,
technology diffusion, bridging the technology gap and increasing the
productivity of atleast 2,000 hectares per agricultural service
centre. The higher knowledge inputs for the grass root level
scientists can be provided by M.Sc's and Ph.D in agriculture
sciences numbering around 2500. At the APEX level we can deploy 500
retired Agricultural executives at the rate of one scientist per
district. This team should be entrusted with the responsibility of
doubling the agricultural productivity of 100 million hectares
within the next 3 to 5 years. This national team has to work on a
target of doubling the productivity in a time bound manner for
providing knowledge inputs to the farmers for adopting the organic
farming methods, correct use of quality fertilizer and pesticides,
selection of seed and matching with the soil, drip irrigation, pre
and post harvesting techniques, enhanced use of solar energy. The
team has also got to ensure that the grain is processed into food
and value added products, so that the farmers get the right revenue
for his products. The important point is that the agricultural
scientists have to become partners of the farmers as done by Prof.
Sinha in Bihar.
Let me now talk to you another experience where
seed cotton productivity has been doubled.
Seed cotton productivity
I visited a village called Gheri Buttar near Bhatinda in Punjab,
where I met the farmers who have successfully increased the
production of seed cotton from four hundred and sixty kilogram per
acre to eight hundred and sixty kilogram per acre in the year 2005.
This has been achieved through a productive partnership between
farmers, agricultural scientists, textile industry supervisors and
the Government by following a scientific approach to farming,
provision of quality inputs, strengthening of quality in every
farming step, adopting pre-harvest and post-harvest techniques with
an assured market for quality products namely seed cotton. Most
important action is to enable farmers to get quality seeds, quality
fertilizers and quality pesticides from cooperative societies. I
have suggested the farmers in that village to mount a programme of
second green revolution in Cotton meaning that instead of selling
the cotton produce directly in the market, they should add value to
certain quantity of cotton into yarn, cloth and apparel in the
village complex itself and market it in the national and
international markets which again would need quality standards for
processing, storage, packaging and delivery. This is a model which
is available in the country, which will lift the farmers from the
suicidal tendencies towards prosperity. We should replicate these
successes in many cotton growing regions.
I would like to discuss about one model which has
become sustainable and has brought a difference to over 4 million
farmers in the country.
e-Choupal
ITC has taken the role of a Network Orchestrator in this meta-market
by bringing together an end-to-end solution by synergizing and
unleashing the power of partnerships in public, private and
not-for-profit sectors through e-Choupal. Farmers selected from
within the community, designated as "Choupal Sanchalaks", manage
these kiosks. Sanchalaks help farmers' access different agricultural
crop-specific websites that ITC has created in relevant local
languages. The content includes best farm practices (including
videos), prevailing prices and price trends for crops in Indian and
world markets, intricacies of risk management/farm insurance, local
weather forecast. Farmers can also order, through Sanchalak,
high-quality agricultural inputs such as seeds, fertilizers offered
by the participating partner companies. Finally, e-Choupal goes
beyond mere knowledge-connectivity and enables farmers to exercise
the informed choice by connecting them to local and global markets.
Thus, the human and the digital infrastructure at the village is
complemented and completed with a physical infrastructure in the
form of 'Choupal Saagars', each at the centre of a cluster of 40 e-Choupals.
Saagars offer multiple services under one roof - a marketing
platform, store front for agri-equipment and personal consumption
products, insurance counters, pharmacy & health center, agri-extension
clinic, fuel station and a food court.
An international study has shown that the farmers
income have increased by 20%. The productivity has increased from
14% to 29%. In three years, some 87% of the farmers in the e-Choupal
areas have learned about the e-Choupal services, and 78% have used
it. As of May 2007, e-Choupal services reach more than 4 million
farmers in about 40,000 villages through more than 6500 Choupals
across 8 States of India. ITC intends scaling up the initiative to
reach 10 million farmers in 100,000 villages by 2012. ITC estimates
a payback period of seven years on its total investments in the e-Choupal
initiative with full bouquet of services to the farmers and rural
customers.
In this process, ITC has innovated a win-win
situation for the farmers and the share holders of ITC by linking
the farm operations directly to their agri-export business through
e-Choupal. The system has avoided the middlemen and also ensured
quality product reaching the national and international markets with
quality certification needed by the importing countries. The
efficiencies and the capacities built by e-Choupal for agri-communities
is attracting the rural youth to re-consider agriculture & agri-services
as a viable occupation and encouraging them to take to it with
confidence.
Conclusion
Based on the above three models, I would like to recommend the
following suggestions for immediate implementation for focusing on
increasing the agricultural productivity, enhancing the revenue to
the farmers and farm workers, providing non-farm avenues of
employment to the rural people and progressively increasing the GDP
contribution of the agricultural sector to national economy.
-
Establishment of 50,000 dynamic agricultural
service centres with B.Sc Agriculture graduates and deploying
them to cover 100 million hectares of agriculture land in the
country (1 agriculture service provider for 2,000 hectares) with
the objective of doubling the food productivity in that land in
partnership with the farmers.
-
Empowered Agricultural service centre should be
supported by a two tier system through expert teams at the
district level and the national level.
-
Rural cooperatives may be formed with the
objective of creating exportable processed foods based on the
core competence of each region and non-farm products. The
cooperatives can create a knowledge centers in the villages
based on e-Choupal or Village Knowledge Centre model to link the
farmers directly to the agri-food exporters for marketing the
products. Agricultural service centre personnel should become
resource personnel for this supply-chain management.
-
Industries located in the regions can create
strategic partnership with the farmers as in the case of ITC and
OSWAL group, for providing the knowledge inputs and as a
marketing system for the farmers.
-
Converting agricultural waste as wealth, use of
organic farming practices and also generation of bio-fuels from
waste lands in the villages should be taken as a mission of the
rural sector. The educational institutions, active DRDA and the
Joint Director agriculture in association with NGOs should
become facilitators for these programmes.
In future conferences I would request the
agriculture scientific community to involve the successful farming
groups who had link with the industries and educational
institutions. This will enable sharing of the experience and exact
problems.
My best wishes to all the participants of
Symposium in their mission of promoting Agriculture productivity in
the country and improving the quality of the life of the farmers.
May God bless you.