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India aims to cut crop waste burning in key farm states by 80% – Reuters India

FILE PHOTO: Smoke billows from paddy waste stubble as it burns in a field near Jewar, Uttar Pradesh, India November 6, 2018. REUTERS/Altaf Hussain
Money News
Neha Arora
Mayank Bhardwaj
NEW DELHI (Reuters) – India is likely to reduce crop waste burning, a major source of air pollution during the winter months, by 75-80% in Punjab and Haryana states, part of the countrys farm belt that borders the capital New Delhi, two government officials said on Tuesday.
Every winter, a thick blanket of smog settles over northern India, as a combination of factors such as the burning of crop residues, industrial emissions and vehicle exhaust brings a sharp spike in pollution.
Crop residue burning accounts for about a quarter of air pollution in winter months, various studies show.
The federal government and the state governments of Punjab and Haryana have ensured that rice farmers can easily hire machines to dispose of the paddy stalks and straw, said the officials, who did not wish to be identified in line with government policy.
In 2018, Prime Minister Narendra Modis government earmarked $177.61 million for two years to give farmers the subsidy to buy farm equipment, such as mulching and seed drilling machines, that dispose of crop waste without burning them.
For the current 2020-21 fiscal year, the government allocated $746.06 million in farm equipment subsidies.
The subsidy programme is in its third year, and its going to result in a substantial reduction of up to 75-80% this year, said one of the officials.
The farm fires could pick up in the next few weeks and hit highs in late October and early November, when farmers harvest the rice crop and prepare the ground for winter planting.
So far this year, New Delhi has experienced the longest spell of clean air on record. [nL4N2C84BK]
Rice harvests will start gathering momentum in the next 30 days, and thats the time when these claims about substantially bringing down crop fires will be put to the test, said Vimlendu Jha, an environmental expert who founded the activist group Swechha.
Reporting by Mayank Bhardwaj and Neha Dasgupta; Editing by Alex Richardson
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