
In India’s Assam, ‘hopes dashed’ for high returns on oil palm production
Al Jazeera
India’s plans to produce oil palm domestically including in Assam sees setbacks as lack of processing units ruin crops.
Jorhat, India: Priya Ram Duwarah has planted 60 oil palm seedlings in his half-hectare (1.2 acres) of agricultural land at Mohara village in Jorhat district in the northeast Indian state of Assam.
The 65-year-old farmer, who typically grows paddy and seasonal vegetables, stepped into oil palm planting last September after being assured of high returns by the officials of the state agriculture department. While it takes the plants four years to bear fruits, he says that the wait is worth the time.
Reason: the promise of higher returns.
Duwarah told Al Jazeera that cultivating paddy earns him approximately 40,000 rupees ($478) a year, a sum that is “too paltry” in the wake of the rising inflation. “The government officials assured me of doubling my income,” since the region has climatic conditions favourable to oil palm and Duwarah decided to venture into the business, he told Al Jazeera, sounding enthusiastic about his new crop.
He is one of about 1,200 farmers in Assam who have taken up oil palm farming with the dream of enhancing their income.
