YSRCP Leader Urges Government Action on Fertilizer Shortage in Andhra Pradesh

IO_AdminAfrica14 hours ago3 Views

Quick Summary

  • M.V.S. Nagi Reddy, former vice-Chairman of Andhra Pradesh State Agriculture Mission (APSAM) and YSRCP leader, called for urgent action by teh State government to secure additional urea allocations from the Central government due to severe shortages affecting farmers.
  • Farmers in Andhra Pradesh are reportedly queuing up at Primary Agricultural Credit Societies (PACS) and Rythu Bharosa kendras (RBKs), reflecting the dire situation on-ground.
  • Nagi reddy alleged exploitation by private dealers who push farmers into buying nano urea and pesticides amidst shortages.
  • This year saw an increased demand for fertilizers with nearly 2 lakh hectares shifting cultivation from groundnut and oilseed to paddy and food grains, alongside heightened demand for maize, cotton, and vegetables due to heavy rains.
  • Distribution changes promised by Agriculture Minister K. Atchannaidu-altering urea allocation ratios between PACS/RBKs and private dealers from 50:50 to 70:30-have reportedly not been implemented yet, exacerbating the shortage problem.
  • Rejecting claims that farmers’ “panic buying” caused scarcity, Mr. Nagi Reddy pointed towards traders allegedly creating artificial shortages instead.

Indian Opinion Analysis
The reported shortage of urea in Andhra Pradesh highlights both systemic planning issues within agricultural policy implementation as well as external factors such as increased rainfall patterns altering crop demands in farming areas this season. The ongoing reliance on centralized fertilizer allocation underscores a need for better forecasting frameworks tailored specifically to regional shifts in crop patterns each year.

Nagi Reddy’s criticism over delays in execution of promised allocation revisions suggests gaps between policy formulation and execution that may affect smallholder farmers disproportionately-a segment less likely to hoard supplies but most vulnerable during such supply disruptions.

While urging faster intervention from both state mechanisms and central resources might be immediate priorities due to agricultural distress concerns raised here protecting long-term system stability might ALSO Demand :A focus enhancing transparency farmer -dealer dynamics !learning

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