Rains and falling prices prompt farmers to shift from pulses to soyabean, cotton

The combination of low receipts and good monsoon rains has prompted farmers to move away from pulses and sow more commercial crops, especially soybean and cotton, which are trading well above their Minimum Support Price (MSP).
According to the latest data compiled by the Union Agriculture Ministry till July 29, farmers have sown an area of 106.18 lakh hectares (LH) under pulses in the current Kharif crop season since June 1. This is up from last year’s area coverage of 103.23 LH.
However, the picture is different when one looks at individual pulses and state-wise acreages. Arhar/Tur (pigeon-pea), the country’s largest produced Kharif pulses crop, has seen a dip in area sown from 41.75 LH to 36.11 LH. This has been compensated for by increases under moong or green gram (from 25.29 to 29.26 LH), urad or black gram (27.94 to 28.01 LH) and other pulses (8.24 to 12.81 LH).
In addition, the only major pulse-producing states that have recorded a significant increase in the area are Rajasthan (21.65 lakh to 32.10 lakh), Madhya Pradesh (17.83 to 18.28 lakh) and Uttar Pradesh (6.22 to 7.08 lakh). Others have seen a decrease, notably in Maharashtra (20.69 to 17.81), Karnataka (18.32 to 16.94 LH), Telangana (4.11 to 2.21 LH), Gujarat (3.80 to 2.86 LH) and Odisha (3.08 to 2.41 LH).
Arhar acreage has fallen in Karnataka (from 12.73 to 11.50 LH), Maharashtra (12.51 to 11.12 LH) and Telangana (3.43 to 1.88 LH), while rising for moong mainly in Rajasthan (14 to 19.41 LH) and for urad in MP (12.83 to 13.74 LH) and UP (3.46 to 4.55 LH).
There is a clear explanation for the above trend. Arhar is selling at around Rs 7,300 per quintal and soybean at Rs 6,300 in Maharashtra’s Latur market. Their corresponding MSPs are Rs 6,600 and Rs 4,300 per quintal, respectively. The gap between the ruling market price and MSP is, thus, higher in soybean.
“In arhar, there is also less price certainty. The actual price that I got during the harvest season was Rs 6,100/quintal, below last year’s MSP of Rs 6,300, whereas my average soyabean realisation was Rs 6,500 and it is unlikely to fall much,” says Rajkumar Bhosale, a farmer from Bombali village in Latur district’s Deoni taluka.
The 45-year-old has this time, planted arhar only on 5 acres and soyabean on the rest of his total 20-acre holding. The last Kharif, he sowed both crops on 10 acres each. “My yields from soyabean are 8-9 quintals per acre, as against 7-8 quintals for arhar. More important, while both are sown in June-July, soyabean is harvested by September-October and arhar only towards December-January. So, I get marginally higher yield even with lower duration in soyabean,” says Bhosale.
Not for nothing then the cumulative all-India acreage under soyabean has gone up from 111.89 LH to 114.69 LH. Maharashtra (43.83 to 45.62 LH), Rajasthan (9.56 to 11.24 LH) and Karnataka (3.78 to 4.08 LH) have posted increases while dropping slightly in MP (49.76 to 48.76 LH) where farmers have sown more area under urad. Within pulses, the preference has been for moong and urad, as their maturity time is less (60-70 days and 80-90 days, respectively) than that of arhar (160-180 days).
Besides soyabean, pulses have also lost out to cotton, with 117.65 LH being sown under the fibre crop, up from 111.69 the last year at this time. Maharashtra alone has seen an increase in area from 38.12 LH to 41.21 LH. In Gujarat, cotton has gained acreage (21.77 to 24.50 LH), mainly at the expense of groundnut (18.68 to 16.27 LH).
Ganesh Nanote, a 30-acre farmer from Nimbora village in Telhara taluka of Maharashtra’s Akola district, has planted cotton on 20 acres and soyabean on 10 acres. “Normally, I grow urad on 5 acres. But the losses from unseasonal rains at harvesting time during September in the last two years have made me divert my entire urad area to cotton. And why not, when kapas (raw un-ginned cotton) rates are so high?” he points out.
Cotton prices in Akola, which were Rs 7,500 per quintal at the start of the October-November harvesting season, rose to Rs 12,000 in March and are still at Rs 8,000 levels. “I sold for an average of Rs 9,500. This time too the prices will be good, and will certainly be higher than the MSP of Rs 6,080 per quintal (for medium-prime varieties),” says Nanot.
The area under cotton has also increased as all the main cotton growing states – south, west and north-west India – have received surplus rainfall this monsoon season. Being a crop of 6-8 months duration, usually more than 4-5 harvests by December and cotton by February requires more water than soybean, groundnut or pulses.