Natural disasters cause Tk 105cr loss in Kurigram’s agri sector this year
Shafique Bebu
Publish: 16 Aug 2024, 02:09 PM
Kurigram,
Aug 16 (UNB)-Severe droughts, excessive rainfall and flooding have caused an
extensive loss to agriculture in Kurigram as thousands of hectares of land
dedicated to jute, aman seedbeds, vegetables and aush paddy have been damaged,
said authorities.
Of them, jute
cultivation in the low-lying areas has suffered the most. This year, the
agricultural sector in the district has incurred losses amounting to Tk 105
crore with jute alone accounting for more than half of that sum.
Kurigram, which is intersected
by five inter-border rivers - the Brahmaputra, Dharla, Teesta, Dudhkumar and
Jinjiram - and sixteen other rivers, is prone to frequent natural disasters
such as floods.
This year, this northern
district experienced a drought during April and May followed by excessive
rainfall throughout June, with 1,100 millimeters recorded, according to the
Rajarhat Agricultural Weather Office.
Flooding began in early
July and even after two weeks of flooding water has not completely receded from
the low-lying areas.
According to the
Department of Agricultural Extension (DAE) in the district, the target for jute
cultivation this year was set at 17,950 hectares but due to the drought only
17,256 hectares were cultivated.
Of them, 2,884 hectares
of jute have completely been destroyed by the heavy rains and flooding.
Visiting Jatrapur and
Paikgachhi unions under the Sadar upazila, this correspondent found that many
jute plants have withered due to being submerged in water.
Farmers are now drying
the dead plants to use as jute sticks and some are attempting to harvest the
jute, though the quality and yield are poor. Consequently, jute farmers are
struggling not just with profitability but even with recouping their
cultivation costs.
Rahimuddin, a farmer
from Ghono Shyampur area of Jatrapur Union, said, "I had cultivated jute
on two bighas of land, and it was almost time for harvest. The flood submerged
everything, and now all the plants are dead. I have no option but to cut and
dry them with sticks."
DAE Official Md. Mamunur
Rahman told UNB that 21,346 jute farmers have been affected by floods as some
10,240 metric tonnes of jute were damaged causing a loss of Tk 56 crore.
He also said that
efforts are underway to encourage farmers to switch to Aman paddy cultivation
as soon as the floodwaters recede.
Moreover, the department
is advising farmers in the flood-affected areas to prepare for early Rabi crops
if the waters take time to recede.
End/UNB/Corr/SU/F