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'Climate change, global warming impacted tea plantation in Assam'
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IANS | 06 Feb, 2023
Climate change and global warming have adversely affected tea
plantations in Assam in the last few years, experts said, adding that
without irrigation, tea plantations are finding it difficult to survive.
P. Soman, senior agronomist and plant physiology
expert, said that climate change is one of the top five challenges of
the tea industry in Assam.
Soman, as a key speaker at a workshop
at Golaghat, explained in depth "how changes in agronomy help micro
irrigation technology to enhance crop performance".
Tea plantations are highly climate dependent, he pointed out.
Speaking
in the workshop, technical expert Vinay Radhakrishnan highlighted the
importance of hydro pneumatic pumps of advanced technology.
The
Tea Academy of North East Tea Association's (NETA) has organised the
two-day workshop on "Importance of Technology driven irrigation and
fertigation in Tea" at the NETA headquarters at Golaghat.
Piyush
Gattani, CEO of MD's Organic (Distributor of Jain Irrigation Systems
Ltd), highlighted the cost economics of installing drip irrigation with
fertigation and automation in tea.
Senior tea planter from West
Bengal, Shiv Saria, shared his broad experience and benefits he gained
by using micro-irrigation in tea plantations.
Jain Irrigation
Systems, for the first time in India, installed drip irrigation with
fertigation and automation at around 100 hectares of tea plantation
successfully in Assam's Karbi Anglong.
Jain Irrigation is also
working hand in hand with the tea plantation to introduce the latest
precision micro-irrigation technology or need-based irrigation system.
In
this system, the decision to irrigate and fertigate an agricultural
field is derived based on inputs received from satellite field data,
soil moisture sensors and other applications, NETA Advisor Bidyananda
Barkakoty said.
He said that the two-day workshop was an eye
opener to new possibilities of sustainable agricultural development and a
way to deal with challenges faced by the tea farmers of Assam.
Assam,
which produces roughly 55 per cent of India's tea, has more than 10
lakh tea workers in the organised sector, working in about 850 big
estates.
Besides, there are lakhs of small tea gardens owned by individuals.
The tea belts of Assam's Brahmaputra and Barak Valley are home to more than 60 lakh people.
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