Agri scientist advocates inclusion of millet in PDS
The Hindu
‘Incentives should be given to farmers for growing nutri-cereals’
Making a strong pitch for inclusion of millets in the daily diet of the population for their nutritional value and other health benefits, All India Pearl Millet Research Project coordinator Chellapilla Tara Satyavathi has opined that the Central and State governments should make millets a component in the Public Distribution System (PDS), while incentivising farmers to grow nutri-cereals at the same time.
Ms. Satyavathi from the Central Arid Zone Research Institute (CAZRI), Jodhpur, who supervises the works done on millets at agriculture research stations across the country, inaugurated a Germplasm and Seed Cold Repository at the Agriculture Research Station at Rekulakuntla in Anantapur district on Sunday.
Accompanied by Principal Scientist B. Sahadeva Reddy and pearl millet researcher Chandra Reddy, Ms. Satyavathi inspected the research farm where fortified pearl millets, popularly known as bajra, are being grown. With the largest quantum of millets grown in a single district being Anantapur, the ICAR-All India Coordinated Research Project on Arid Zone Pearl Millets has been continuing here since 1972.
Giving details about pearl millet cultivation, Ms. Satyavathi said of the millet acreage of 13 million hectares in the country, pearl millet is grown in 7.41 million hectares. The productivity of the crop has gone up from 1200 kg per hectare to 1,370 kg per hectare since 2016. “The Minimum Support Price (MSP) for the crop has gone up from ₹1,300 per tonne to ₹2,250 per tonne. However, the farmers are being offered much less than this by private buyers. This exploitation should stop,” Ms. Satyavathi told The Hindu .
Referring to the nutritional value of the crop, Ms. Satyavathi said pearl millet variety ABV04 Bajra or Sajjalu, released from Anantapur, is among the most nutritious diet as it contains 70 ppm of iron and 60 ppm of zinc, useful lipids, and fatty acid. The minimum values of iron (42 ppm) and zinc (32 ppm) have been set nationally for any bajra variety grown. “It is also useful for those suffering from hypertension and diabetes,” she pointed out.
Roti, khichdi, ambali, puffs, and flakes prepared from millets are some of the popular off-the-shelf products available. Broken bajra granules can be used for making idly in place of rice.