India

43.6 per cent of India’s net sown area lacks irrigation

One key indicator is the percentage of net sown area that remains non-irrigated, which serves as a measure of a state’s agricultural dependence on monsoon rainfall.

Vismay Basu

NEW DELHI: The Directorate of Economics and Statistics publishes detailed state- and year-wise data on land use, covering aspects such as crop patterns, production, irrigation, and cultivated areas. One key indicator is the percentage of net sown area that remains non-irrigated, which serves as a measure of a state’s agricultural dependence on monsoon rainfall.

This is calculated by subtracting the net irrigated area from the net sown area. The resulting non-irrigated area, when expressed as a percentage of the total net sown area, highlights how reliant different states are on rain-fed agriculture.

According to the latest figures, 43.6% of India’s net sown area lacks irrigation, underlining the country’s overall dependence on monsoons. States such as Manipur (85.1%), Sikkim (84.3%), Assam (83%) and Maharashtra (81.2%) exhibit high levels of rain-fed farming, suggesting limited irrigation infrastructure.

In contrast, Punjab (0.7%), Haryana (6.9%), UP (12.9%), and Madhya Pradesh (18.4%) report extensive irrigation coverage, enabling more reliable agricultural productivity.

India-UK trade: Decoding CETA from tariff cuts to the carbon tax challenge

PM Modi flags off India's first hydrogen-powered train from Haryana, launches Rs 15,000 crore projects

Raut hints at Maharashtra leadership change, claims Fadnavis may move to national role

Iran acknowledges 'attacks on power infrastructure', urges people to use less electricity

Khera says Indira, Manmohan engaged protesters, accuses Centre of 'indifference' to Wangchuk

SCROLL FOR NEXT