India - Climate Change Ravages Betel Cultivation in the Aravallis, Forcing Farmers to Abandon Their Ancestral Livelihood

04.03.2026 26 views

Climate change has devastated betel cultivation in Rajasthan’s Aravalli foothills, destroying a centuries-old livelihood of the Tamboli community. Erratic weather, rising costs, lack of insurance and poor market access have forced farmers to abandon agriculture, triggering large-scale migration and threatening the survival of this traditional crop.

Betel cultivation, once the lifeline of several villages nestled in the foothills of the Aravalli Range, is steadily disappearing as climate change devastates a centuries-old farming tradition.

Villages such as Kharairi, Bagrain and Khankheda in Bayana tehsil of Bharatpur district, Rajasthan, were historically known for their thriving betel leaf cultivation. For generations, the Tamboli community depended almost entirely on this crop, which formed the economic and cultural backbone of the region. Over the last 15 years, however, erratic weather patterns have crippled production and pushed farmers out of agriculture.

Unseasonal cold waves, rising temperatures and unpredictable rainfall have proven disastrous for betel vines, which are highly sensitive to climatic changes. Farmers say winters are now harsher, summers unusually intense and rainfall increasingly erratic. A slight dip in temperature below 20°C causes leaf burn, while excess or delayed rain leads to root rot. Since betel vines do not bear fruit or flowers, any damage to leaves results in complete crop loss.

Kharairi village reflects this collapse vividly. Once nearly 500 residents were directly engaged in betel cultivation; today, fewer than 100 remain. Economic activity has dried up alongside farming. A branch of the Alwar-Bharatpur Rural Regional Bank, once a symbol of prosperity, shut down as trade declined. Families that once employed labourers and extended credit are now struggling for survival.

Farmers report a sharp fall in productivity. Earlier, a vine would grow up to 15 feet and yield more than 100 leaves; today, growth is limited to seven or eight feet, producing barely 70–80 leaves. At the same time, input costs for bamboo, plastic sheets and protective shade structures have increased, squeezing already shrinking incomes. Many cultivators, unable to sustain losses, have abandoned farming altogether.

Policy gaps have further deepened the crisis. Betel cultivation is not covered under the crop insurance scheme in Rajasthan, leaving farmers without compensation during climate-related losses. Despite repeated demands, growers say they have received no insurance protection, subsidies or technical support from the state.

Market access and transportation pose additional challenges. With no nearby wholesale markets, farmers must transport produce to distant cities such as Delhi, Agra, Banaras and Aligarh. Earlier, state-run buses eased this journey, but services were discontinued nearly a decade ago, forcing reliance on costly private transport.

As livelihoods collapsed, migration accelerated. Young people from these villages have moved to Jaipur, Delhi and other cities, working as security guards, drivers, shop assistants and daily wage labourers. Houses stand locked, streets lie deserted and community life has withered. Many children have dropped out of school, and traditional farming knowledge passed down through generations is fading fast.

For the Tamboli community, betel leaf cultivation was more than an occupation—it was an identity. Today, abandoned bamboo structures and empty fields bear silent witness to a tradition on the brink of extinction. Farmers warn that unless betel cultivation is urgently supported through insurance coverage, market access, transportation and climate-resilient practices, this historic agricultural legacy of the Aravalli region may soon be lost forever.

 

Source - https://eng.ruralvoice.in

04.03.2026

Ireland - Rainfall causes crop losses and delayed field work for tillage farmers

While crops have fared better than anticipated, the consistent rainfall has pushed spring operations behind schedule.

04.03.2026

Nigeria - Moor Farms launches ₦6 million per acre agricultural investment scheme

A Lagos-based a agribusiness firm, Moor Farms Limited, has launched a three-year agricultural investment scheme requiring a minimum investment of ₦6 million per acre, promising staged returns from cassava, cashew, and corn cultivation.

04.03.2026

Nigeria - NAICOM, Agric Ministry deepen food security through insurance

To fortify Nigeria’s food systems and shield farmers from mounting risks in a volatile, uncertain, complex and ambiguous environment, the National Insurance Commission (NAICOM) and the Federal Ministry of Agriculture have forged a strategic alliance aimed at expanding agricultural insurance coverage, de-risking the sector to accelerate sustainable food security nationwide.

04.03.2026

Ghana - CSIR Scientists Deploy AI Spore Traps to Outsmart Crop Fungus

Researchers at the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research Crops Research Institute (CSIR-CRI) are piloting a system that traps airborne fungal spores and feeds the data into an artificial intelligence application to predict crop disease outbreaks before they take hold on farms, in what scientists describe as a fundamental shift from reactive to preventive plant disease management in Ghana.

04.03.2026

USA - USDA sets spring crop insurance prices

Spring crop insurance prices were finalized by USDA’s Risk Management Agency this week, at $4.62 per bushel for corn and $11.09 per bushel for soybeans. 

03.03.2026

Bangladesh - Incomplete dam work sparks fear of crop loss in Sunamganj haor areas

Farmers in the haor areas of Sunamganj are gripped by anxiety as unfinished crop protection dams threaten to submerge their Boro fields amid fears of an early influx of water originating from the upstream Indian mountainous regions.

03.03.2026

Vietnam - Aid for agricultural insurance premiums proposed to rise

Although agricultural insurance policies have been piloted since 2011, the sector remains new and high risk, creating multiple challenges in implementation.

03.03.2026

Ukraine - State compensates farmers up to 60% of crop insurance cost

The Ministry of Economy of Ukraine is launching a large-scale program to support agricultural producers.