Wheat has been planted on 1.8 million acres less than the targeted area in the country, sparking fears that production will drop by two million tons, farmers say.
In Punjab alone, around one million acres cannot be sown with the crop as a result of high urea prices and poor government strategy, said Muhammad Ibrahim Mughal, Chairman of Agri Forum Pakistan in a statement.
He pointed out that unnecessary delay in sowing, low area under the crop and high fertiliser prices would badly hurt wheat production. Domestic wheat consumption was 25 million tons but the output could be around 23 million tons, Mughal said. He said the country had 5.5 million tons of wheat stocks, of which three million tons would be consumed by the time new crop arrived.
Mughal stressed that the country would have easily produced three million tons of surplus wheat and earned Rs75 to Rs100 billion had the government made timely decisions.
He called on the government to arrest those responsible “for creating artificial shortage of urea” and ensure that farmers used fertiliser and pesticides in required quantities.
Published in The Express Tribune, December 18th, 2011.
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The sickening price of corruption. Just how many will starve because of the greed of the few. Pakistan - The Land of the Hungry Pure!