Photographs: Akhtar Soomro/Reuters.
Diseases caused by unseasonal rains have ruined almost 70 per cent of the kharif onion crop in Maharashtra this year, which is responsible for the nationwide shortage of the commodity, a senior ICAR official said on Thursday.
The Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR) will now prepare a list of do's and don'ts for farmers to avoid such a situation in future, Additional Director General (Horticulture) Umesh Shrivastava told PTI.
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What led to the onion shortage?
Image: Labourers sort onions at a wholesale vegetable market in Siliguri.Photographs: Reuters.
What led to the onion shortage?
Image: Onion prices at a record high.It can be identified by minute, sunken, yellowish spots that can enlarge and join together. Infected leaves have oval, greenish or yellowish-gray spots with yellow halos that turn dark as they age.
ICAR is an autonomous national organisation that plans, conducts and promotes research, training and transfer of technology in the field of agriculture and horticulture.
What led to the onion shortage?
Image: An activist from India's main opposition BJP, wearing a garland made with onions, shouts slogans.Photographs: Ajay Verma/Reuters.
Water-logging in the "flat beds" of onion fields in the western state, which accounts for 30 per cent of production of the staple vegetable in the country, caused the two diseases, resulting in widespread damage, Shrivastava added.
The problem was compounded due to cloudy and humid weather afterward, he said.
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What led to the onion shortage?
Image: Rain hits onion yield.The diseases have reduced onion yields by almost 50 per cent, triggering a drastic shortfall in retail markets, which in turn drove prices of the staple vegetable past Rs 70-85 a kg in the retail markets of major metropolitan cities.
Shrivastava said drawing lessons from the "mistakes", ICAR has decided to prepare detailed do's and don'ts for farmers to help them tackle such a menace in the future.
What led to the onion shortage?
Image: Maharashtra is the leading producer of onions.Photographs: Reuters.
"ICAR will write to the state governments (the executors of the Centre's agricultural advisories) to ask farmers to strictly follow the do's and do-nots to minimise the adverse effect of erratic monsoon in the future," he added.
India produces around 4 million tonnes of onions annually and is the second largest onion producer in the world after China.Maharashtra is the leading producer in the country, with an average output of around 12 lakh tonnes per annum.
The main onion producing areas in Maharashtra are Nashik, Pune, Ahmednagar, Satara, Sholapur and Dhulia.
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