Polyhouse scheme for farmers comes a cropper : The Tribune India

Join Whatsapp Channel

Polyhouse scheme for farmers comes a cropper

DHARAMSALA: About Rs 300 crore spent by the government on the scheme to provide polyhouses to farmers and make the state bowl of off-season vegetables has not achieved the desired results.



Lalit Mohan

Tribune News Service

Dharamsala, September 25

About Rs 300 crore spent by the government on the scheme to provide polyhouses to farmers and make the state bowl of off-season vegetables has not achieved the desired results.

Barring a few progressive farmers in the state, common farmers who had purchased polyhouses with about 90 per cent subsidy being provided by the state government have either abandoned polyhouses or sold them to the adjoining state.

Due to failure of the scheme, the state Agriculture Department has also tightened norms for farmers who want to take the benefit of the polyhouse scheme. The state government has now made it mandatory for farmers who wanted a subsidy under the polyhouse scheme to get training from the Palampur agriculture university.

Dr Kanwar, Director (Research), Palampur Agriculture University, when contacted, admitted that farmers would now have to undergo a certificate training course with the institute for getting a subsidy under the polyhouse scheme. He said farm practices under polyhouses were different from general agriculture.

In Lahaul-Spiti, farmers initially complained that their polyhouses were getting damaged due to heavy snow in winter. The university then suggested changes in the design of the polyhouses that were to be brought up in cold desert areas like Lahaul-Spiti. “We got mesh wire installed in polyhouses due to which they were able to sustain in winter. Many farmers in Lahaul and Spiti were now producing vegetables till November”, Dr Kanwar claimed.

Farmers also faced technical problems in installing polyhouses during the stint of the previous BJP government. A large number of farmers had reported that their polyhouses had got infested with pests and had become unviable. Experts from the Palampur Agriculture University suggested that polyhouses should have two doors to prevent attack by pests.

Farmers were asked to spend money from their own pocket for converting polyhouses from single door to double door. Since most of the farmers failed to do so, their polyhouses got infested with pests and were rendered useless.

Farmers of Kangra district do not have a proper market for selling their produce. Even the local markets in Kangra district receive vegetables from Punjab. If the state government creates a market for selling vegetable produce of farmers of Kangra, farmers can be encouraged to produce more and take benefit of the polyhouse scheme of the government.

Top News

Excise policy case: Supreme Court questions ED over delay in probe, asks for case files before Kejriwal's arrest

Supreme Court defers order on Delhi CM Arvind Kejriwal's interim bail plea

The Bench tentatively gave a date for hearing on May 9 or to...

Excise 'scam': Delhi court extends CM Arvind Kejriwal's judicial custody till May 20

Excise ‘scam’: Delhi court extends judicial custody of Arvind Kejriwal, Manish Sisodia, K Kavitha

Special judge for CBI and ED matters Kaveri Baweja extends K...

China appoints senior diplomat Xu Feihong as new envoy to India

China appoints senior diplomat Xu Feihong as new envoy to India

Xu, 60, is expected to travel to New Delhi soon to take over...

Congress fields Sher Singh Ghubaya from Punjab’s Ferozepur Lok Sabha seat

Congress fields ex-MP Sher Singh Ghubaya from Punjab’s Ferozepur

Ghubaya has won this seat twice as SAD nominee in 2009 and 2...

Lok Sabha Election 2024 Phase 3 LIVE: Polling under way in 93 constituencies; PM Modi casts vote in Ahmedabad

Lok Sabha Election 2024 Phase 3: Around 60.19 per cent polling till 5 pm; clashes in West Bengal

Assam records the highest turnout at 74.86 per cent followed...


Cities

View All