Cotton acreage may drop by 10% on falling yield, low price



In the 2023 kharif season, as per government data, cotton crop was sown in around 12.38 million hectares, which was over 3 per cent less than the previous year




I

After recording the lowest ever production in the last 15 years at 29.41 million bales in the 2023-24 season, the next year might also not look particularly good for the cotton crop with overall sowing projected to drop by almost 10 per cent due to falling yields and low price realisation, an assessment done by the Cotton Association of India (CAI). 


Cotton marketing season runs from October to September, and the crop is largely cultivated during the kharif season after the advent of monsoons.

Cotton sowing has already dropped by an average of 18 per cent this year (2023-24) 

CAI’s latest crop committee report shows that in the 2023-24 season, cotton production in India is expected to be eight per cent less than in 2022-23 at 29.4 million bales (1 bale=170 kg), which is the lowest in 15 years.

 India has around 38 per cent of the world’s cotton acreage, which is around 12.5 million hectares out of the 33 million hectares globally.

“The main reason for this reduction in cotton yield is that our BT seed technology is very old. We now need new seeds. Climate change and the El Niño effect are also hurting India’s cotton crop in a big way, as 73 per cent of the area where cotton is grown is not irrigated. Also, attacks from pink bollworms are reducing yields,”


Post a Comment

0 Comments