For two and a half decades, Pakistan’s cotton output remains virtually stagnant

Committee proposes production target should be set at 25m bales by 2025


Zafar Bhutta March 17, 2018
The committee listed different causes of stagnation in cotton harvest which included the use of old first generation Bt technology, absence of better quality seeds, lack of solutions to the virus problem, low processing quality and high contamination levels. PHOTO: FILE

ISLAMABAD: The current government of Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) has not proved beneficial for cotton farmers as the commodity’s production has recorded a drastic fall because of what many say the ruling party’s primary focus on pro-industry policies, says a report.

Though the government has provided incentives for powerful industrial lobbies like textile manufacturers who have been allowed duty-free import of cotton, it has paid little attention to shielding the interest of local farmers.

A committee constituted by the cabinet has pointed to poor management by different governments over the past two and a half decades. During the tenure of the current government, cotton harvests have dropped significantly.

A report presented to the cabinet by the committee revealed that cotton production faced virtual stagnation since 1991-92 and fluctuated in a range of 10 to 12 million bales over the period.

The output fell to 9.9 million bales in 2015-16 during the PML-N tenure compared to average consumption of 15 million bales, making Pakistan a net importer of cotton.

Pakistan plans Rs10b research fund to boost cotton output

The committee listed different causes of the stagnation in cotton harvest which included the use of old first generation rather than fourth generation Bt technology, absence of better quality seeds, lack of solution to the Cotton Leaf Curl Virus (CLCV) problem, low processing quality at ginning factories and high contamination levels in the produce.

These reasons brought down the profit for cotton farmers and slashed by 20% the area planted with the crop from 2004 to 2016.

The committee, headed by Planning Commission Deputy Chairman Sartaj Aziz, was tasked with examining the proposal of transferring control of Pakistan Central Cotton Committee from the Textile Division to the National Food Security and Research Division.

The committee had also been asked to analyse the causes behind the virtual stagnation in cotton production over the past two decades and suggest institutional measures for achieving a steady growth in cotton yield and output.

Before preparing the report, committee members held a series of consultative sessions with representatives of both the textile and food security divisions, representatives of Sindh and Punjab provinces, academia and industry associations.

The committee recommended that cotton production target should be set at 25 million bales by 2025, planted area be increased 45% from 2.4 to 3.5 million hectares and crop yield be taken to 1,200 kg per hectare.

It proposed that research funds may be provided for a restructured central cotton committee in a bid to support the overall textile industry.

It called for providing Rs2.5 billion in cotton research fund over five years through competitive grants managed by the Pakistan Agriculture Research Council (Parc) under the supervision of an inter-provincial committee.

Cotton production may fall short of 14.04m-bale target

It recommended building capacity of the National Biosafety Committee and the Federal Seed Certification and Registration Department as regulators.

It was suggested that administrative control of the Pakistan Central Research Committee should be handed over to the National Food Security and Research Division in order to strengthen public-private partnership in cotton research through increased funding from the public sector and more pro-cotton policies.

The cabinet gave approval to the research committee’s handover to the food security division from the textile ministry.

Published in The Express Tribune, March 17th, 2018.

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