Friday, December 11, 2009

cm Uttrakhand Ch.Tikait


Tikait compliments Nishank

Highest SAP for Cane


BKU’s Tikait compliments Nishank

Dehradun, December 9

Mahendra Singh Tikait, leader of the BKU, today met Uttarakhand CM Ramesh Pokhriyal Nishank and complimented him for announcing the highest SAP of sugarcane. The Chief Minister reiterated his resolve to work for the benefit of sugarcane farmers, sugarcane cooperative societies as well as the sugar mills for the overall development of the state.

Bharatiya Kisan Union leader Mahendra Singh Tikait during a meeting with Uttarakhand Chief Minister Ramesh Pokhriyal Nishank in Dehradun on Wednesday. A Tribune photograph

Friday, November 27, 2009

sugar can price issue

Sugar mills in India’s top cane-producing region have offered higher prices to growers, raising the hopes that protesting farmers would start selling cane helping shares of sugar companies rise.



The Uttar Pradesh sugar mills have agreed to pay Rs 25 a quintal as incentive to farmers over and above the state advised price (SAP) of Rs 165-170. Farmers in the country’s second biggest sugar producing state had been demanding a price of Rs 280 a quintal. Given the current realization of Rs 3,200-3,300 a quintal in sugar, mills will make decent profits even after paying Rs 190-195 for every quintal of sugarcane.



“After discussing the issue with cane societies, we decided to offer Rs 190 a quintal for the common variety and Rs 195 for the early variety. 47 mills are crushing cane today in western UP against 39 mills a year earlier,” C B Patodia, president of the UP Sugar Mills Association and advisor to the Birla Group of Sugar Companies said. However, the cane farmers’ leaders are unrelenting on the issue and have demanded that UP millers pay at least on a par with the neighbouring states such as Haryana and Uttarakhand.



“The cane millers in these two states are paying between Rs 210-220 a quintal. We have been demanding the cane price of Rs 280 a quintal, but at least the price level being paid in Haryana and Uttarakhand for cane should be offered,” Bharatiya Kisan Union (BKU) spokesperson Rakesh Tikait told Business Standard.



He informed BKU was on with its ‘Lucknow march’ programme on December 1 to press for better cane price.



“We will congregate in Lucknow on December 1 and press for a meeting with UP chief minister Mayawati on the issue,” he asserted.



Earlier this month, the mills had offered to pay Rs 180-185 a quintal while the farmers insisted on Rs 280. All through, farmers withheld supplies, delaying the crushing season in the state which normally starts after Diwali in late-October.



Subsequently, the row boiled into a major controversy, with political parties joining the issue, forcing the Centre to call an all-party-meeting to discuss the pricing issue among other things. The beginning of crushing may bring some cheer on the wheat front as farmers would now harvest the cane crop and vacate the field for the sowing of the food grain crop.



Stormy protests by farmers had disrupted parliament last week and delayed cane crushing in the northern Uttar Pradesh state, which could have further squeezed supplies in the world’s biggest consumer of the sweetener.



Sugar scarcity in India, which imported 5 million tonnes in 2009-10, has helped New York sugar futures rise the highest in nearly three decades. Shares of sugar firms such as Bajaj Hindusthan, Oudh Sugar, Dhampur Sugars, Triveni Industries, Balrampur Chini and Simbhaoli Sugars were up 3-5 per cent at 0830 GMT, outperforming the benchmark index that was up 0.5 per cent.



Last week, thousands of farmers protested against low state-set sugarcane price and forced adjournment on the first day of parliament. Growers have threatened another protest in the state capital of Uttar Pradesh from November 26, if their demand for higher price was not resolved.



India, the world’s top sugar consumer, faces a big shortage of the sweetener as the cane crop contracts for a second year, after farmers switched to better-paying crops last year and then the weakest monsoon in 37 years hit the crop this year.

Thursday, November 12, 2009

Farmer: Come up and let the world listen you


If there is one principal lesson farmers can draw from history, it is the following: that, when farmers are not strong, many sections and sectors of the society are ready not only to tell the farmers what they should do,
but even worse, to speak on their behalf.
This historical recurrence is often all in good faith. Most ministries, political parties, associations, promotional non-governmental organizations as well as development agencies and most experts have indeed committed
this sin, often in an unaware fashion. Indeed, many a political party has set up campaign sub-committees to get farmers’ votes. Many a non-governmental organization, whether from the north or the south, but with no mandate from farmers, have stood up in international meetings to voice, in often fascinating detail, the farmers’ plight.
Questions remain on whether farmers’ voice is such a sought-after commodity after all, and whether the society would like farmers to speak. Indeed the lack of farmers’ voice is often unnoticed, precisely because of the enthusiasm with which other people are ready to speak on behalf of farmers. Similarly, during periods when farmers do speak, farmers’ voice is more readily seen as something of a "problem". Irrespective of its desirability, the lack of an effective farmers’ voice is indeed an impediment to agricultural and rural development. Whether it be the development of agriculture or of rural society or the protection of environment, farmers play a vital role. A two-way dialogue therefore needs to be established between farmers, and other actors which determine the political, economic, legal as well as technological framework within which farmers operate.