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Stubble burning: 1.47-crore fine collected from Punjab, Haryana farmers

ByPress Trust of India, New Delhi
Dec 06, 2024 07:50 AM IST

According to a Delhi Pollution Control Committee analysis, the city experiences peak pollution from November 1 to 15, coinciding with a rise in stubble-burning incidents in Punjab and Haryana.

An environmental compensation of over 1.47 crore has been collected from farmers for burning stubble in Punjab and Haryana until November 30, the government informed Parliament on Thursday.

Farmers with less than two acres of land will now pay an environmental compensation of 5,000, up from 2,500, while those with land between two and five acres will be fined 10,000 instead of 5,000. (PTI)

Union minister of state for environment Kirti Vardhan Singh told the Rajya Sabha that to curb paddy residue burning, officials inspected 10,791 agricultural fields in Punjab and 1,406 in Haryana, imposing penalties in 5,525 and 638 cases, respectively.

The cumulative amount of environmental compensation imposed in Punjab is 2,16,97,500 and in Haryana, it is 21,12,500.

In view of the Supreme Court’s tough stance on the issue due to the deteriorating air quality in the Delhi-NCR region, the Centre last month doubled the fine for farmers burning crop residue, increasing the penalty to 30,000 for those with more than five acres of farmland.

Farmers with less than two acres of land will now pay an environmental compensation of 5,000, up from 2,500, while those with land between two and five acres will be fined 10,000 instead of 5,000.

A top Union environment ministry official told parliamentarians on Wednesday that stubble burning in Punjab and Haryana is among the main reasons for air pollution in Delhi-NCR and several steps are being taken to encourage farmers to use paddy residue for animal feed and industrial purposes.

According to a Delhi Pollution Control Committee analysis, the city experiences peak pollution from November 1 to 15, coinciding with a rise in stubble-burning incidents in Punjab and Haryana.

The major factors behind stubble burning include the paddy-wheat cropping system, cultivation of long-duration paddy varieties, mechanised harvesting that leaves standing crop stubble, labour scarcity, and the lack of a viable market for crop residue.

Studies estimate that, during peak burning periods, farm fires contribute up to 30% of PM levels in the Delhi-NCR region and surrounding areas.

Data presented in Parliament on Thursday also showed that Bihar’s Begusarai and Rajasthan’s Hanumangarh recorded more days with AQI above 400 compared to the national capital last year.

According to the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB), an air quality index above 400 indicates severely polluted air that can adversely affect human health.

Kirti Vardhan Singh told the Upper House on Thursday that the CPCB monitored air quality in 280 cities in 2023, of which 46 experienced a few days with AQI over 400.

He also said that no conclusive data is available to establish a direct correlation between deaths and air pollution, adding it is one of the many factors contributing to respiratory ailments and associated diseases.

 
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