India News | Punjab, Haryana Form Strategies to Tackle Stubble Burning as Winter Looms

Get latest articles and stories on India at LatestLY. Punjab and Haryana governments have embarked on planning elaborate measures for tackling stubble burning issue in the two states ahead of winter,

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Chandigarh, Sep 19 (PTI) Punjab and Haryana governments have embarked on planning elaborate measures for tackling stubble burning issue in the two states ahead of winter,

Four Punjab ministers on Monday got together with experts to formulate a strategy to deal with the stubble burning issue and safeguard the environment.

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Agriculture Minister Kuldeep Singh Dhaliwal, Higher Education and Environment Minister Gurmeet Singh Meet Hayer, New and Renewable Energy Minister Aman Arora, and School Education Minister Harjot Bains chalked out a comprehensive plan which will begin from September 27 with a campaign to make farmers aware of the ill effects of paddy stubble burning and its management.

Under the first phase of this campaign, college students will be enrolled and trained by experts on harmful effects of burning stubble – a major cause of air pollution. – and its absorption into the soil, the government said in a statement.

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After that, special training programmes will be conducted at Punjab Agricultural University, Ludhiana on September 28 and Guru Nanak Dev University, Amritsar on September 29.

These students will visit villages across the state to make people aware of the harmful effects of burning crop residue, the statement read.

Meet Hayer said that industries which use paddy straw as fuel will be encouraged by the Punjab government.

He said that the government is working on a module to make it mandatory for the brick kilns to use some percentage of paddy straw as fuel.

The same module will be implemented in other industries also, he said.

Dhaliwal said that a 15-day deadline has been extended to farmers to apply for subsidies on the ‘Happy Seeder' machine so that a maximum number of them can plant wheat without burning the stubble.

Happy Seeder machines have been provided to the agriculture block development officers to be used by marginal farmers free of cost.

For the absorption of stubble into the soil without burning, the agriculture department will also spray 5,000 acres of D-decomposer solution in an experiment as a pilot project, said Dhaliwal.

Additional Chief Secretary to Chief Minister A Venu Prasad and Additional Chief Secretary Agriculture Sarvjit Singh were also part of the meeting.

Dhaliwal said that a massive awareness campaign is going to be launched from Punjabi University, Patiala, to sensitise the farmers not to burn stubble.

On the same lines, Haryana government too has prepared a comprehensive plan to tackle the stubble burning issue. The state's New & Renewable Energy department has prepared a draft policy ‘Haryana Ex-Situ Management of Paddy Straw Policy – 2022' to this purpose. The policy was discussed in a meeting held under the chairmanship of chief secretary Sanjeev Kaushal here.

Kaushal said that the decisions and suggestions taken in the meeting would be incorporated in the policy to be approved by the Chief Minister, an official statement said. He said that a district-wise mapping strategy for stubble demand has also been included in the policy. Kaushal said that the policy aims at creating a conducive environment to attract private investment in paddy straw-based biomass power projects, industries, compressed biogas plants, briquettes, pallets, waste to energy plants, brick-kilns, packaging materials and bio fuels etc. Apart from this, it will also aim to encourage the farmers to cut, bale, and store paddy straw produced in their fields and help them sell it for use in various projects. Through the policy, a link will be established between farmers and industries, gaushalas, and end-users for demand and supply management of crop residues.

Also, emphasis will be laid on the use of stubble in power plants, industrial boilers, brick kilns or any other industrial, commercial or institutional establishments in the state. Promoting research in new technologies is also one of the main objectives of this policy. The chief secretary said that various strategies will be adopted to promote the use of stubble and biomass.

(This is an unedited and auto-generated story from Syndicated News feed, LatestLY Staff may not have modified or edited the content body)

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