NEWS
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News
01.04.2015

USA - North Dakota winter wheat crop continues to slide

The condition of North Dakota's winter wheat crop continues to decline.The Agriculture Department says in its latest crop report that 53 percent of the winter wheat is rated in either good or excellent condition. A report earlier this month showed a combined 64 percent rating.The report says the lack of snow cover had livestock producers worried about the grazing and haying potential, but those same conditions allowed for productive lambing and calving with minimal losses.Cattle and calf conditions were rated 89 percent excellent or good. Calving was 26 percent complete.Sheep and lamb conditions were 82 percent excellent or good. Lambing was 43 percent finished.Source - http://kfgo.com/

01.04.2015

USA - Kansas wheat crop condition slips again, 39% good/excellent

The winter wheat conditions declined slightly in Kansas last week as rain favored the eastern side of the state while largely missing the central and west, the state's weekly crop condition report said on Monday.The state's wheat was rated 39% good to excellent, 44% fair, 13% poor, and 4% very poor, down slightly from the previous week's 41, 42, 13, and 4.Wheat condition ratings for Texas and Oklahoma were not available in time for this report.Kansas weather warmed to 4 to 6 degrees fahrenheit above average, with light rain of up 0.50 inch in eastern areas, "while the west remained dry."Lack of moisture is becoming a concern "in a number of counties." Topsoil moisture was rated 1% surplus, 46% adequate, 37% short and 16% very short. The lowest readings were in the central and western areas. Readings a week ago were 1% surplus, 50% adequate, 35% short, and 14% very short.Wheat jointing was 15%, ahead of last year's 5% and the average of 18%.Mild weather during the week had farmers applying fertilizer and herbicides and making preparations for spring crop planting.Source - http://www.blackseagrain.net/

01.04.2015

Philippines - Dry spell affected both the agriculture and fishery sectors

Agriculture officials expect farmers to have harvested their rice crops to avoid losses from the dry spell.The El Nino phenomenon or drought, which affects Region 1, has started last September and is expected to last until July this year.Weather officials said the dry spell, which was felt during the last week of February in La Union, has affected both the agriculture and fishery sectors.Ning Peralta of the Department of Agriculture had advised farmers last year that they should have harvested their crops by the time the dry spell is at its peak.She said farmers were asked to plant early maturing variety of palay starting last year and suitable for gathering within three months."At this time that the peak of dry spell has started, farmers should now shift from crops that need less amount of water but still can survive the weather condition like corn, legumes, and nuts," Peralta said.The DA set programs which will address the weather phenomenon in various stages.Aside from advocacy and information campaigns in the four Ilocos provinces, the DA also conducted a survey of vulnerable areas, subsidized seeds, conducted cloud-seeding, vaccinated poultry and livestock and distributed disinfectants.The education department is now enjoined to integrate in their lessons topics on El Nino and La Nina. Emphasis shall be on the nature, adverse effects and how each one can contribute in mitigating the effects of these weather disturbances.Of the 47 provinces identified by PAGASA to be vulnerable to El Nino the four region 1 provinces, La Union, Ilocos Sur, Ilocos Norte, and Pangasinan were included.Earlier this month, the City of San Fernando experienced fish kills in separate areas like barangays Biday, Bangcusay and Dalumpinas.Source - http://news.pia.gov.ph/

31.03.2015

USA - Citrus growers facing a tough year

This is the second of a four-part series looking at the severe impact the drought will have on agriculture this summer.On The BrinkWhen it comes to the drought, local citrus growers are facing some of the biggest challenges.The county’s $1 billion citrus crop is reeling from both four dry years and decisions to withhold irrigation water they have relied on for more than six decades.Growers this year are not going to see any surface water and many face a year without ground water as well.“I know we’re going to impacted — we’ve been impacted,” said California Citrus Mutual President Joel Nelsen. He said within the Friant Water division, which includes all of the Tulare County orange belt. He added there are 50,000 acres that are extremely vulnerable because they do not have groundwater.One of those growers is Phillip Giannetto.“It’s a real thing. Right now I’m in disbelief,” he said. Giannetto has 250 acres of oranges in the Terra Bella area with no water. There are approximately 600 growers and some 6,000 acres of citrus in Terra Bella that do not have access to ground water because of the typography. Without surface water, their orchards will die.Last year, Terra Bella Irrigation District manager Sean Geivet was able to find just enough water to keep most trees alive. He is not very confident he can find that water in this fourth year of historic drought.“I don’t see any water until at least April. Bureau (Bureau of Reclamation) has allocated 25 percent of what I got last year for domestic users in Terra Bella,” he said. He added, “I don’t know how Terra Bella is going to survive.”One bit of good news, Lee Cohen with Setton Pistachio said they just got the go ahead to put on line a well the Pistachio company drilled last year to help out the community. That water will be pumped into the community’s water treatment plant.No Water To Be FoundFarmers, however, are still looking for any drop they can get.Giannetto said he needs a foot of water per acre just to keep his trees alive and 3 feet of water per acre to produce a crop. He said he got a very limited crop on a few of his orchards last year. He said he does have a little carryover water from last year, but only enough to keep about 30 acres alive.Nelsen said growers are having to decide which orchard to save and which one to let go. Citrus grower Billy Bennett has decided to let his 10 acres of oranges in Terra Bella die.What water that might be found, will be costly. Giannetto said last year he dug deeply into his savings to pay $1,200 an acre foot. “I’m being asked to come up with $1,330 an acre foot,” he said of this year, “but there’s no water available.”Terra Bella is not the only area of the county struggling. A grower said ground water that was always there is the past, is gone in some areas, like Ivanhoe. Growers who are spending $80,000 to drill well and find no water, do not have the money to drill another and banks are not likely to hand out loans on land with no water.Nelsen said there are 120,000 acres of citrus in the region that will not have surface water again this year. He said the drought has already shown up with smaller fruit size and he is concerned fruit will be hard pressed to get much size next year.“You need water now, then through the summer you’ve got to have sufficient water for the fruit sizes,” he said. “Then, you hope for some early fall rain.”He stressed, “It’s going to be an extremely difficult year.”Nelsen has been very critical of decisions to send water out to the ocean instead to grow food.“You still have a mindset that producing food is not a priority,” he said, adding that Friant water users had a $6 per acre foot surcharge on what they pay for water for “environmental enhancements. We’ve never been told how that’s being spent,” he added.Tulare County Farm Bureau Executive Director Trica Stever-Blattler said growers with younger trees will get by because they need less water. She has heard citrus could lose 25 percent of its acreage, most of that in the southeastern portion of the county. Nelen said it takes five to seven years before a new orchard begins producing. Tulare County has more than 114,000 acres planted in citrus.“Growers are worried whether this is the last year they will have a crop,” said Stever-Blattler.Giannetto, who works besides growing citrus, said he is more worried for those growers who only grow citrus.“There’s other guys out there that citrus is their complete livelihood.”Also, he said, he is fearful the loss will trickle down to Main Street.Nelsen offered some hope when he said growers have become more water efficient and better at finding ways to survive.“I was surprised last year. It seemed like everybody got through. Who knows what will happen this year,” said Giannetto.Source - http://www.recorderonline.com/

31.03.2015

Spain - 20% of Granada's asparagus lost

The low temperatures registered in the province of Granada in recent days have caused the loss of 20% of the green asparagus harvest, some eight million kilos, as reported by the Union of Small Growers (UPA) of Granada.In a statement, the general secretary of the agricultural organisation, Nicolás Chica, lamented these losses in a key period for the sale of green asparagus (Easter), and estimated them to represent about 30% of the production's total value this year."Throughout the whole month of March we've had really low temperatures, which have delayed the asparagus campaign. But there was a very severe frost that made it impossible for us to harvest the product for an entire week. This has resulted in there being virtually no production by the time we started the harvest," explained Nicolás Chica.The problem, according to UPA-Granada, is that the most immediate consequence of these losses in production is that many countries at European level are consuming green asparagus from America, especially Mexico and Peru. This entails a considerable damage, considering that Granada is the leading national producer of green asparagus and Spain is the world's third, behind Peru and China.Source - http://www.freshplaza.com/

31.03.2015

India - Farmers advised to take special measures: rainfall, strong winds forecast in April and May

Rainfall with hailstorm and strong winds forecast for the next two months will not only delay wheat harvesting but also badly affect quality of the commodity, said agriculture and weather experts."Departments concerned in Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa need to continuously update farmers about daily weather conditions and urge them to take special measures to minimise losses due to unusual rains along with hailstorm and strong winds expected in April and May, the harvesting and threshing months of wheat in the two provinces", said Dr Ghulam Rasool chief meteorologist of Pakistan Meteorological Department.He said that harvesting of wheat has started in Sindh and the uncertain weather may also affect the commodity in Sindh. The agriculture departments in all provinces need to advise farmers to harvest keeping the weather in mind, he said.Dr Shakeel, Crop Commissioner Ministry of National Food Security and Research (MNFS&R) said that the ongoing rain spell will have a negative impact on quality of wheat, if it is prolonged. "Harvesting of wheat crops has started in Sindh while in Punjab and KP it will start from April 15 and will continue till May 30", he said.Another official of MNFS&R said that such a situation is not a good omen for growers, as dampness not only affects the quality of the wheat, but can also cause rust and fungus in wheat which may cause serious damage to the crop.The Federal Committee on Agriculture (FCA) had fixed wheat production target at 26.3 million tons for Rabi season 2014-15, with Punjab targeted to produce 19.6m tons, Sindh 4.4m tons, KP 1.4 million tons and Balochistan 0.9m tons.According to Met Office, an active weather system (westerly wave) entered Pakistan on Saturday. Under the influence of this weather system, first spell of rain-thundershowers occurred in various parts of the country on Saturday/Sunday. The next spell of rain-thundershowers is predicted for the ongoing week in various parts of the country.During these spells, rains may be accompanied by strong gusty winds and isolated heavy-fall in Malakand, Mardan Peshawar, Hazara divisions, Kashmir and Gilgit-Baltistan. Heavy downpours may generate flash flooding in the local ravines of Upper KP (Malakand, Hazara, Mardan, Peshawar divisions). Due to heavy rains, there is high probability of landslides in the vulnerable areas of Upper KP (Malakand, Hazara divisions), Gilgit-Baltistan and Kashmir.During the next 24 hours, mainly dry weather is expected in most parts of the country; however, partly cloudy weather conditions are expected with chances of more rain-thunderstorm at isolated places in Malakand, Hazara, Peshawar, Mardan, Rawalpindi, Gujranwala divisions, Kashmir and Gilgit-Baltistan during evening/night.Source - http://www.brecorder.com/

31.03.2015

USA - Peach farmers in South Carolina examine crops after freezing temperatures

The freezing temperatures last weekend were not a welcome sight for farmers growing peaches and strawberries. Kay McCutcheon, of McLeod Farms in McBee, said it’s too early to tell how much the weather affected the peach crop but the strawberries were saved.She said the strawberries were covered and wind machines circulated air in the peach field as workers kept a watchful eye all night long.“There was some damage in the peach crop, but it shouldn’t affect local availability,” McCutcheon said. “The effect of the cold will be evident in the early maturing varieties that have started to bloom.”She said the freezing temperatures aren’t a problem until your trees have bloomed. The recent warmer weather, McCutcheon said, weather encouraged the peach trees to bloom.“Once they bloom, the cold can hurt,” McCutcheon said. “We don’t know yet how much the peach crop was affected. The only way to tell is to have to wait a few days for it to get further along blooming.”On average, McLeod Farms ships about 10,000, trays of peaches up and down the East Coast. Each tray holds 40 peaches. McCutcheon said the biggest demand for peaches is at the end of June.“It’s highly unlikely there would be another cold spell, this is pretty late in the season already,” she said. “McLeod goes through extraordinary measures to preserve our crops.”Further upstate, freezing temperatures did more damage, with one York County grower worrying he may have lost half his crop.The Herald of Rock Hill reports that temperatures dipped into the 20s Sunday morning.Arthur Black grows peaches west of York and says the cold damaged peach blossoms and he fears half his crop is gone. Ben Smith said he lost some peaches too, but has not yet thinned his crop so he hopes the loss won't be too bad.Ron Edwards at Springs Farm in Fort Mill tells the newspaper he was up Saturday night warming the peaches and running water over his strawberry plants to prevent them from freezing.Source - http://www.scnow.com/

31.03.2015

India - Himachal to seek relief from Centre for crops destroyed by rain

Unseasonal rain and hailstorms that have hit Himachal over the past fortnight are not only giving sleepless nights to farmers but the freak weather has washed away the prospects of a good crop this time.With farmers and orchardists suffering significant losses due to damaged crops, a central government team led by agriculture minister Radha Mohan Singh and health minister JP Nadda will assess the losses to crops in the state on Tuesday.The damage has been most severe to the stonefruit crop in the Kullu, Shimla and Mandi regions. More than 80 % of stonefruits including apricots, almonds and plums have been damaged by the freak weather that lowered the temperature at the time of blooming.After the inclement weather took its toll on stonefruits it's the turn of apple growers to worry lot as the declining temperatures and heavy rainfall could hamper fruit pollination since orchards in the lower belts are about to bloom.Rain and cloudy weather usually disturbs the natural pollinating agents, particularly the insects and honey bees that are the main pollinating agents. The losses to the horticultural sector have been pegged at more than Rs 30 croreThe heavy rain that has inundated farmlands has also adversely impacted the wheat and vegetable crops in the state. Wheat is sown in both the middle and low attitude areas with a total of 3,58,000 hectares under cultivation.Farmers in the state are now seeking relief from the government for the losses. Paras Ram, a farmer in the Nagrota Bagwan area of Kangra district, whose standing wheat crop was flattened by the unseasonal rains, said: "The government should take immediate measures to offer financial relief to the farming community. The sunny days last week had raised our hopes but the bad weather has again returned to haunt us. This time around the losses are huge and yields are likely to fall to one-half of those recorded last year."The heavy showers have also destroyed vegetable crops in several areas of the state with losses estimated at Rs 300 crore. The rainfall had also resulted in the spread of yellow rust in parts of Bilaspur, Kangra Mandi and Una districts.Pritam Chand, a vegetable grower in a village near Dharamsala, said the pea and potato crops in his fields have been badly hit by the heavy rain.With unseasonal rain and hailstorms wrecking crops the Himachal government is looking towards the central government for providing compensation to affected farmers. The state will hand over a memorandum seeking relief to the central government team when it visits Simla on Tuesday. The state government has pegged losses caused by snow hailstorms and rain at over Rs 1,000 crore.Source - http://www.hindustantimes.com/

30.03.2015

India - Heavy rains cause wheat woes

Torrential rain and hailstorm in parts of Punjab on Saturday night and Sunday damaged the wheat crop on a large scale.The rain started on Saturday night and continued intermittently on Sunday, damaging the wheat crop in Gujranwala’s rural areas especially Ahmad Nagar Klaske, Alipur Chattha, Ghakkar Mandi, Rahwali, Eminabad, Wazirabad, Qila Deedar Singh and Kamoki.Farmers said wheat spreading over hundreds of acres had been destroyed by rain and hailstorm. They demanded that the Punjab government exempt them from every kind of tax and utility bill to help them make up for their losses.Small-time growers found themselves in hot waters in the face of loss of wheat. After the rain, they said, water was standing in the fields which was detrimental to the crop.The rain also inundated the low-lying areas and caused a great deal of difficulty for people. The Met office forecast heavy rains in Sialkot and the catchment areas of Jammu and Kashmir on Monday.Source - http://www.dawn.com/

30.03.2015

India - Assistance to farmers who suffered 25-50% loss

Urban Development Minister, Government of India, Shri Venkaiah Naidu today held review meeting with Gujarat Chief Minister, senior ministers and government officers in Gandhinagar on agriculture sector situation in Gujarat in connection with recent unseasonal rains.Speaking briefly to media persons after meeting Shri Naidu said that central government will think about extending help to farmers who have suffered damage in range of 25 to 50%.It should be mentioned that as per the present rules, the government can extend help to farmers only when their standing crop suffers over 50% damage due to natural calamity.Following recent unseasonal rains, the government conducted survey and found that damage was less than 50%.Naidu was of opinion that if at all centre decides to help farmers who have suffered loss in range of 25-50%, then such decision needs to be implemented across all 7-8 affected states. Therefore the decision will be taken in this regard only after consultation in Delhi.Source - http://deshgujarat.com/

30.03.2015

Philippines - Farmers advised to insure animals

Farmers and poultry owners need to be on guard against diseases that threaten pigs, goats, chickens and other farm animals during the dry season, said the Cebu Provincial Veterinary Office.Dr. Mary Rose Vincoy, who heads the office, said heat stroke, pneumonia, and orf or sore mouth infections are among the diseases that might affect these animals.“Pigs are very prone to heat stroke because of their fat content. People who own a piggery already know what to do. Some would use electric fans, provide their animals water always, and some would bathe them two to three times a day,” said Vincoy.During summer, she said that goats usually get the orf virus, while livestock who go through unstable weather—like alternating periods of heat and cold in the mountains—can suffer from pneumonia.“In elevated areas, it gets very hot during daytime but cold at night. Pneumonia can occur not just during cold weather, but when there are sudden changes in the temperature,” she said.Last year, the Provincial Veterinary Office and the Department of Agriculture (DA) organized an information caravan as one of their activities to lessen the effects of El Niño.According to an article posted on the DA website, the agency’s mitigation plan includes positioning drought-tolerant seeds of rice, corn and vegetables; making water pumps available; and providing other forms of assistance to livestock breeders.The Capitol in partnership with the Philippine Crop Insurance Corp. has also insured the farmers’ animals.Farmers who are not yet registered will have to visit their municipal agriculture office and fill out the forms to avail themselves of the Capitol’s insurance program, said Vincoy.Source - http://www.sunstar.com.ph/

30.03.2015

India - Give genuine crop insurance a chance

Unseasonal rain has damaged the Rabi crop and farmers want compensation. This is in line with tradition. The tradition must change. Proper insurance must play a bigger role in mitigating risk of this kind. India cannot prosper as a nation if its agriculture remains a low-productivity sink of underemployment and poverty that is at the mercy of the gods of the skies and the lords of the realm. Farming must become a profitable, commercially viable activity, in which the pooling of risk across space and time is recognised as a cost as legitimate as the cost of fertiliser, but will not burden the consumer because of high levels of productivity overall.Pricing of crop insurance covers should be based on actuarial costs, and products made available to individual farmers. Also, insurance companies will sell crop insurance only when they see opportunity for a positive actuarial outcome, overtime and profit. Political interference must end and insurers allowed to run their business on commercial lines. Farmers, as buyers, must recover the insurance cost from consumers through higher productivity.Politicians should focus their energies on building rural infrastructure and on removing the barriers to farmers optimising their income.India has tried many crop insurance schemes, but all of them have run up against the problem of identifying the exact loss for individual farmers. So, areas were assessed rather than individual farms. The advent of drones that carry sophisticated remote sensing equipment opens up new possibilities in monitoring and assessment of specific, localised damage. This would, in turn, allow farmers to dump patronage and opt for commercial insurance and higher productivity. In farming too, the government should play enabler, not patron saint.Source - http://blogs.economictimes.indiatimes.com/

30.03.2015

USA - York County peaches damaged by late-season freeze

Winterlike temperatures that blew through the area over the weekend are creating challenges for local farmers, some of whom fear up to half their peach crop may be lost to the unseasonable cold.The National Weather Service put the upper part of South Carolina under a freeze warning between midnight and 11 a.m. Sunday. Temperatures dropped into the 20s overnight, creating conditions that were closer to the norm for January than late March.“Very cold temperatures will kill sensitive vegetation that has already started to grow this season,” warned an AccuWeather alert issued Saturday.After surveying his orchard Sunday morning, Arthur Black said the cold snap had a devastating effect on Black’s Peaches along S.C. 5, west of York.“The ones that had bloomed out, it pretty much killed it,” Black said. “I lost over half of (the crop).”Ben Smith estimated a similar rate of loss at the Peach Tree on Filbert Highway. But because he has yet to trim his peach trees this season, he was hopeful the apparent damage to the heart of the peach crop would be superficial.“I lost some peaches,” he said, “but I still have to go thin them out. … I don’t think it will be too bad.”Black hoped the many peaches that have yet to blossom had some insulation against the cold, but it may be some time before the full affects of the freeze become apparent.The cold snap was the result of a strong cold front that moved through the mountains and the Piedmont region and northeastern Georgia over the weekend, according to the National Weather Service in Greenville-Spartanburg. The front comes after a week in which temperatures reached the 70s and ahead of a week forecast with similarly warm temperatures.For growers, these kinds of spring freezes can be an occupational hazard.“I’ve seen them killed off on the last (day) of April,” Smith said.In situations when freezing temperatures coincide with the start of the spring growing season, farmers are limited in what they can do.“I don’t have a wind machine,” Black said, “There’s not a whole lot I can do to raise the temperature.”Ron Edwards, general manager at Springs Farm in Fort Mill, hopes to have beaten the worst of the freeze by working overnight Saturday warming the peaches and running water over the strawberry crop to prevent a freeze from setting in.“It got coldest just before dawn, so I don’t think it got cold long enough before the sun started shining on them,” Edwards said before finally going to bed Sunday morning. “I’ll have to check on them again tomorrow.”But for Black, the result of the weekend freeze may be straightforward.“I just won’t have as many peaches,” he said.Source - http://www.thestate.com/

27.03.2015

India - Resolution on crop insurance scheme

The state Assembly on Thursday adopted a resolution unanimously urging the Central government to amend crop insurance scheme by treating farmer as an unit instead of the present system of village as a unit.The Central government has been implementing weather-based crop insurance scheme with village as a unit. Losses suffered by farmers has come down with village as unit, implementation of the scheme with farmer as a unit will benefit the farmers further.Agriculture minister Pocharam Srinivas Reddy moved the resolution, which was approved by members of all the opposition parties unanimously. Deputy speaker Padma Devender Reddy announced that the resolution was adopted unanimously.While introducing the resolution, Pocharam said that in the present method, insurance companies were not paying compensation to the farmer whose crop has been damaged because the companies were taking mandal or the village as a unit.The insurance companies were paying compensation only if the damage is more than 50 percent in the mandal or village. The state government wants the Centre to amend the present scheme with farmer as an unit so that farmers whose crops gets damaged due to natural calamities will be eligible for insurance claim for the damaged crops, the minister explained.Source - http://www.newindianexpress.com/

27.03.2015

Ukraine - Planting campaign started in all regions

The planting campaign started in all regions of Ukraine, stated the Director of the Department of farming agriculture and technical policy of the agro-industrial complex at the Ministry of Agrarian Policy, Volodymyr Topchiy.In particular, Ukrainian agrarians planted early spring grain crops throughout 744 thsd ha (30% of the forecast).Agrarians of the certain raions of Luhansk and Donetsk regions being under the control of Ukraine also started the planting campaign. Thus, in Donetsk region the early spring crops planting capmaign was completed throughout 36.1 thsd ha (20%), and in Luhansk oblast - 10.9 thsd ha (16%), declared V.Topchiy.Source - http://www.apk-inform.com/

27.03.2015

India - States overestimated damage to rabi crops

In what may be a clear indication of how states initially over-estimated the extent of damage suffered by farmers in recent rains and hailstorms, the Centre on Thursday issued revised data which noted that states had earlier over-reported areas under damaged Rabi crops by nearly 75 lakh hectares.Revised figures, extended by states, show that the total area under damaged Rabi crop is 106.73 lakh hectares in 14 states as against 181 lakh hectares reported earlier.As per the revised data, the maximum damage is reported from Rajasthan followed by Uttar Pradesh, Haryana, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Punjab and Himachal Pradesh. Among all the Rabi crops, wheat faced the maximum damage (on nearly 63 lakh hectares of land).Referring to estimated production of wheat and current retail price, officials in the agriculture ministry indicated that the value of damaged wheat could roughly be in the region of Rs 32,000 crore. "If one calculates the overall damage while taking into account retail prices of other affected Rabi crops including pulses, maize and mustard, the loss could go beyond Rs 40,000 crore or more", said an official.He, however, noted that the exact amount of loss could be assessed only when the harvest starts next month. States have, meanwhile, been asked to prepare their own respective estimates. It will further be fine-tuned after the visit of inter-ministerial teams from Centre to the affected states shortly.The revised report was compiled on the basis of information provided by seven senior officers of the agriculture ministry who went to Madhya Pradesh, Gujarat, Maharashtra, Uttar Pradesh, Punjab, Haryana and Rajasthan to do an assessment of crop damage in the wake of rains and hailstorms during February 28-March 16.After getting the report, Union agriculture minister Radha Mohan Singh assured the states that the central government was committed to extend all help to affected farmers. His ministry asked states to immediately "take necessary steps for restructuring farmers' loans and disbursement of crop insurance".The amended report shows that Uttar Pradesh had initially over-reported the extent of damage by about 60 lakh hectare. The state had first reported damage of Rabi crops on around 97 lakh hectares of land, but later revised it to 26.79 lakh hectares.Source - http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/

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