Economic
Highlights
New Delhi, 4
November 2019
Cluster Ventures
UTTARAKHAND SHOWS WAY
By Shivaji Sarkar
A country that is having crunch of jobs is
going a different way for creation of livelihood in the poorest areas of remote
hills. Efforts are on to bring changes in the inaccessible villages and its
worth putting a focus on. It is the less talked about national project of Union
Ministry of Science and Technology (MST), Department of Science and Technology
(DST) starting with the people of Garhwal and Kumaon hills in Uttarakhand.
The programme, which can gradually be
replicated in the North-Eastern regions, aims at creating self-sufficient
clusters, called gram sankuls, trying to empower the community by letting them
mobilise resources, technology, management and training support, says Dr Mahesh
Sharma, Chairman, special task force of the MST and Chancellor, Mahatma Gandhi
University, Motihari.
These can be classified as a bit more than
start ups, dream mission of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, which he spoke about even
during his recent visit to Saudi Arabia.
The sankuls could add Rs 5000 crore to Rs
2.63 lakh crore to the State economy, employ large numbers and ensure happiness
in due course, says Sharma. The programme is spread in a vast area covering 65
villages through four clusters in Haridwar, Tehri Garhwal, Rudraprayag and
Kausani in Bageshwar in Uttarakhand. It creates interface with villagers and
hi-tech local labs, universities and other institutions and has low cost of Rs
6.3 crore.
One such hi-tech lab Indo-Dutch Horticulture
Technologies in Bhimtal, Nainital through cloning, tissue culture has
introduced high density apple orchard plantation system. Each plant of apple,
gladiolus, blueberry, blackberry and strawberry and other exotic flowers fetch
fancy sums, says Joint MD Siddharth Chaddha. He has technology support from
Netherlands and gets incentives from UCOST.
Over 70 per cent of the people in the State
are dependent on agriculture. In districts like Chamoli, Uttarkashi and Tehri
about 45 per cent of the population is below the poverty line. Overall the State
has 30 to 40 per cent people living below the poverty.
A large number of people are migrating as
income from agriculture is not constant and stable. It is causing distress and
instability. Stemming it through doles or loans is not a sustainable model,
Sharma says. People want to be in their native places but they have to be
strengthened by involving them in self-sustaining ventures. These include
agriculture, horticulture, floriculture, traditional arts and crafts in a
scientific manner.
The basic is to provide stability through
livelihood. During the last two years the programmes are succeeding and have
involved over one lakh people (state’s population is 1.35 crore) in four
districts at different altitudes beginning at 290 metre as in Gendikhata in
Haridwar to about 2100 metre in Kausani in Bageshwar.
As per the altitude, selection of plants,
crops and other details change. The Uttarakhand State Council for Science and Technology
has that difficult task of creating the interface for the entrepreneurs since
2017. As climate and other aspects change each district or region has to follow
a diverse model to make them competitive, sustainable with a scientific base.
Initiating these clusters has not been easy.
Bringing people together with a common aim for not only creating a model but also
sustainable livelihood is cumbersome. Motivating them to be together has been a
challenge in an area, where vast stretches have to be traversed on foot. This
is a challenge for management and marketing.
But the sankuls or clusters have become
lively, says Sharma and gives credit to UCOST scientists like Piyush Joshi and advisors
like Threes Kapur who continuously maintain live contact with the key cluster
persons. A major achievement has been involvement of women in these
experimentations. The UCOST provides them kits and marketing support.
Some women like Prema Joshi, President of the
Kausani cooperative, Champa Joshi, Deeksha and Hema Pant have been great
strengths. Prema has been instrumental in setting up a school in an area where
there was none. She says it was not easy to motivate parents to send children
to schools. Today, over 800 children attend her school and in many cases they encourage
the parents in her new cluster work.
Prema says people are circumspect. It is difficult
to convince the folks that these programmes initiated by the government though with
least funds could succeed and become profitable. She spends days in discussion
to make people join the programme, which in her area has started yielding
modest profits, a part of which goes to the corpus of the cooperative. She has
also been providing them quality implements.
Heera Singh, a farmer and organiser of the
cooperative, benefitted from poly-house vegetable cultivation and contributed
Rs 20,000 last season. Twenty others are in honeybee cultivation and five in
mushroom.
The response, from an initial lukewarm, has
now become warm as just 100 gramme bichhu ghaas or Himalayan nettle
grass pain killer oil fetches them Rs 200. The grass fibre is used to weave
shawls that have demand among tourists and local markets.
At Haridwar, they are growing avocado,
medicinal plants with support of some local universities, orange and pears.
Each region has different specialty. This helps the farmers having niche
markets and check competition among clusters. The margins are usually high
The poly-houses -- large sheds made of
polythene sheets for initial stability for cultivation of vegetables or crops,
poly-nets for transplanting and growing these in controlled climate is a
programme. The poly-technology with mix chambers and net-chambers protect the
crops from extreme cold, snow or heat and gives the cooperative members
sustainable income. It also saves plants from wild animals like monkeys and
boars. Each poly-house earns them Rs 1 lakh or more. This can increase with
addition, processing, preservation of fruits, use of tissue culture and bank
financing.
Siddhant Chaddha says that experimentation in
his farm has shown that Uttarakhand can be the largest apple grower by adopting
new methods. Note that tiny Holland controls 80 per cent of the world apple exports.
His lab, a model for local farmers, draws students even from Arunachal Pradesh for
studying new techs.
The new technology saves the farmers’ crops
and checks migration. The poly-house technology has helped them sell organic
vegetables to local hotels. The farmers, however, cannot meet more the demand.
The clusters are considering ways to increase production with UCOST help.
With modest investments, says Sharma, and
intense efforts and marketing Uttarakhand is planning to transform the State to
emerge as a national model through synergising rural community. ---INFA
(Copyright,
India News & Feature Alliance)
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