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Bt Cotton Performance in Maharashtra Kharif 2005

- Report of the Monitoring & Evaluation Committee [MEC]

INTRODUCTION

Bt Cotton, under the Monsanto-owned proprietary branded technology of Bollgard, was officially allowed for commercial cultivation in India starting from 2002. Kharif 2005 saw the fourth year of cultivation in India, including in Maharashtra. The companies claim that 30.55 lakh acres have seen Bt Cotton planted this year in the country, with Maharashtra having the dubious distinction of planting the largest number of Bt Cotton acres at a figure of 14.75 lakh seed packets sold in the state. Even in Kharif 2004, Maharashtra had the largest area of Bt Cotton planted in the country, surpassing Gujarat [1][from 54000 acres in Kharif 2003 to 5.25 lakh acres by Kharif 2004, as per Monsanto-India, quoted in Financial Express]. This is probably not too surprising, given that cotton cultivation of any kind is the highest in Maharashtra. Last year, Maharashtra was also one of the largest producers in terms of the lakhs of bales produced in the state.

About 97% of the cotton crop in Maharashtra is estimated to be grown under rainfed conditions and grown mostly on suitable black cotton soils. Hybrids cover about 73% of the cotton area of the state, while improved cultivars are grown on the remaining land. The main cotton regions of the state include Vidarbha region, Marathwada, Khandesh and Deccan canal regions.

In 2002-03, the Maharashtra state government’s reports point out that on an average, 3-5 sprays were needed both for Bt Cotton and non-Bt Cotton. This was based on the monitoring of 904 plots or 10% of Bt Cotton farmers in that year, selected randomly from every village and from selecting 10 plants per plot for recording observations.

The reports also said that bollworm infestation was low that year and that there was a marginal difference in bollworm infestation on Bt Cotton [5-7%] and on non-Bt Cotton [7-12%]. The number of larvae per plant observed on both Bt and non-Bt Cotton by the official survey in that year is given below:

Sl No

Name of the Bollworm

Average number of larvae/plant

Bt Cotton hybrids

Non-Bt Cotton hybrids

1

American Bollworm

1.5 to 2.5

2 to 3.5

2

Spotted Bollworm

0.1 to 0.5

0.1 to 0.5

3

Pink Bollworm

0.07 to 0.1

0.22 to 0.30

Farmers who took part in the study also reported that the average boll weight of the Mahyco Bt Cotton hybrids grown that year was very less compared with non-Bt Cotton hybrids (nearly half).

Many complaints about wilt infestation were received from Yavatmal, Amravati and Nanded districts on Bt Cotton varieties, notes the official report [“A brief note on Bt Cotton in Maharashtra 2002-03”, shared by the Director-Agriculture]. CICR studied this phenomenon and reported that it was not pathogenic wilt but a physiological disorder and named it ‘para-wilt’.

The government’s report also notes that ‘as per the feedback of the Officers, the performance of Bt Cotton as compared with other popular hybrid varieties is not satisfactory. These non-Bt varieties yield better than the Bt varieties’.

In 2003-04, the available brief government reports observe that the retention of bolls of first flush is observed more in Bt Cotton fields and that the attack of bollworm was low on Bt cotton.

In 2004-05, 265,200 packets of Bt Cotton were sold in Maharashtra as per the state government. The government’s monitoring report pointed out that there was no significant difference with regard to squares, flowers and bolls between Bt Cotton and non-Bt Cotton. The percentage infestation of sucking pests was found to be more in Bt Cotton than in non-Bt Cotton 12 to 15% in Bt Cotton and 7-10% in non-Bt Cotton. Once again, parawilting was reported on Bt Cotton from districts like Yeotmal, Nanded, Aurangabad and Amravati. The yield of Bt Cotton was found to be higher than the standard check by around 15%, as per the government’s monitoring.

The state government’s report also notes that in Maharashtra, ‘the area under organically grown cotton is increasing at a faster rate’. The organic farmers in Nasik and Amravati divisions are not using Bt Cotton hybrids but are successful in getting higher yields than Bt Cotton, the report points out. The state government also found that farmers using IPM practices are managing disease and pest problems successfully even by reducing chemical pesticides. The produce from such approaches has more demand and fetches better prices, a government report notes. The department’s conclusion on Bt Cotton from its observations in 2004-05 says that “by using Bt Cotton, farmers can safeguard their cotton crop only against bollworm that too for a short period and that it cannot protect the crop from other pest and diseases attack”. The following is an official tabulated picture that compares different farming systems in the state.

Comparison between different farming systems for cotton *

Component

Cost incurred (Rs./ha)

Traditional

IPM Based

Organic

BT

Land Preparation

1700

1700

1700

1700

Seed

1125

1125

1125 + 165 (intercrop)

4000

Interculture

2600

2600

2000

2600

Fertilizers

2800

2800

525 (organic)

2800

Irrigation

900

900

900

900

Plant Protection

6200

1200

1200

4000

Harvesting

2500

2500

2500

3000

Total

18305

13305

10595

19480

Production

13 qt

14 qt

15 qt

16 qt

Total receipt

29900

32200

34500 + 5700

(intercrop)

36400

Net profit    

 

11595

18895

29605

17320

Source: Dr. Sudhir Kumar Goel, Commissioner Agriculture, Pune, Maharastra.  Presentation on “Bt cotton Reality and Challenges”, Nagpur, 2nd 3rd September 2005.

The above table clearly shows that the net profit for the farmers is clearly highest in Organic and IPM-based approaches. It is in this context that Bt Cotton cultivation in Kharif 2005 should be looked at.

IN 2005-06, the following was the district-wise picture of Bt Cotton cultivation in Maharashtra for a few chosen districts:

District

Area of Bt Cotton in acres

Yavatmal

153312

Nanded

120000

Buldana

134674

Amrawati

044497

ABOUT MONITORING BY THE M.E.C.  

A Monitoring and Evaluation Committee consisting of 20 civil society organizations from the states of Punjab, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh and Tamil Nadu was formed to monitor Bt Cotton in 2005-06, led by Greenpeace India and Centre for Sustainable Agriculture. This MEC was formed in lieu of the official MEC formed by the Department of Biotechnology, GoI, since it was found to be very ineffective and inefficient in its functioning by most civil society analyses.

As part of the MEC’s effort, in addition to monitoring failure of regulation when it comes to marketing of Bt Cotton [including proliferation of illegal Bt Cotton], conducting of field trials, upholding of biosafety guidelines and so on, a scientific study of comparing Bt Cotton with non-Bt Cotton in terms of field-level performance was taken up in each of the above states.

The following pages present findings from this scientific study from the state of Maharashtra where the study was conducted by YUVA, Nagpur, supported by Greenpeace India and Centre for Sustainable Agriculture. The Principal Investigator was an agriculture scientist, assisted by a team twenty volunteers. Youth from the study villages, having both Bt and non-Bt Cotton farms, educated, with no pre-conceived notions about performance of Bt and non-bt crops and ones who were willing to give time for the study were selected as the volunteers for the study.

OBJECTIVE OF THE STUDY

STUDY DESIGN AND TOOLS

The study had a comparative design, of comparing the performance of Bt Cotton along various parameters of cost, pest incidence, yields, other effects etc., with non-Bt Cotton grown in similar conditions, within a distance of 2 kms from the Bt Cotton farmers. This is to ensure that the same agro-ecological conditions are present for both kinds of hybrids. Any separate management practices adopted for Bt Cotton or non-Bt Cotton were sought to be factored into the analysis. The socio-economic background of the farmers including total landholding, education levels, total members in the family etc., were also sought to be studied.

Analysis also sought to distinguish the findings from irrigated and unirrigated lands separately.

Wherever possible, if the same farmer cultivated both Bt Cotton and non-Bt Cotton, both the plots were included into the study and reference samples.

The monitoring was done on a fortnightly basis throughout the season by trained volunteers who were into farming themselves and from the same area. Observations on the pest incidence were recorded based on study of 20 plants selected randomly per acre of Bt Cotton and non-Bt Cotton in the sample. Data on other questions was collected with the help of a questionnaire. This questionnaire was pre-tested and finalized.

In all, more than 500 person-days of monitoring went into the observations and findings reported here. The investigators monitored the performance upto the 10th flush of harvest in the regions selected. Monitoring continued upto January-end 2006.

LIMITATIONS

SAMPLE SIZE AND SAMPLING PROCEDURE

For the purpose of the study, 165 Bt Cotton farmers and 120 non-Bt Cotton farmers were selected from the 4 districts of Amravati, Buldana, Yavatmal and Nanded.

Sampling was done in an opportunistic and random manner, evolved during initial group discussions in the chosen villages. This was followed by selection of sample farmers depending on the willingness of the farmers to be studied. The villages themselves were chosen based on the largest extents of Bt Cotton grown as per reports from dealers and agriculture department officials [the four districts and the talukas were chosen on the same basis of largest Bt Cotton extents].  The talukas and villages selected for the study are given in the table below:

Sl no

Karamb (Yavatmal)

Dharmabad (Nanded)

Jalgaon Jamod (Buldana)

Morshi (Amrawati)

 

Village

1

Sabargaon

Vilegaon (Thadi)

Gadegaon

Ladki

2

Dongerkherda

Chincholi

Dhanere

Shirkhed

3

Kamatwada

Junni

Asalgaon

Rohankhed

4

Parsodi

Roshangaon

Akola Khurd

Picheri

5

Umri

Bannali

Pimpargaon

Dhamangaon

Once the Bt Cotton farmers’ sample was identified, the nearest non-Bt Cotton farmer or preferably, the same farmer’s non-Bt Cotton plot were then included into the Reference sample.

Care was taken to ensure that the Bt Cotton sample included all varieties of Bt Cotton, irrigated and unirrigated growing conditions and farmers of different kinds of landholdings.

Profile of the Farmers in the Sample

The following table presents a brief picture of the sample of Bt Cotton and non-Bt Cotton farmers chosen for the study:

 

Bt Cotton Sample

Non-Bt Cotton

Sample Size [n]

165 farmers

120 farmers

Number of districts covered

4

4

Number of villages

22

16*

Landholding Details

Average landholding per farmer

9.35 acres

10.61 acres

Upto 5 acres of land

33 (20% of sample)

24 (20% of sample)

6 acres to 10 acres of land

89 (54% of sample)

46 (38% of sample)

11 acres to 15 acres of land

24 (14.5% of sample)

30 (25% of sample)

16 acres to 20 acres of land

15 (9.1% of sample)

16 (13.5% of sample)

Above 20 acres

4 (2.4% of sample)

4 (3.5% of sample)

Irrigation Details

19 farmers (11.5%)

24 farmers (20%)

Education Details

Literate

9 (5.5% of sample)

2 (1.7% of sample)

Upto 5th Class

66 (40% of sample)

29 (24.1% of sample)

College

74 (44.8% of sample)

69 (57.5% of sample)

Graduation

15 (9.1% of sample)

20 (16.7% of sample)

Post Graduation

1 (0.6% of sample)

0 (0% of sample)

Avg. Family Size

6.2 members/family

6.2 members/family

* – it was difficult to find equal number of non-Bt Cotton farmers in Nanded district because of the large proliferation of illegal Bt Cotton here. This resulted in a smaller sample size for Non-Bt Cotton overall

All the sample farmers in both the study group and the reference group [non-Bt Cotton] had their cotton crop on black cotton soils in Kharif 2005. 


PART 2 OF THE REPORT: http://www.lobbywatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=6445