Our Correspondent
Multan
Federal Minister for National Food Security & Research, Syed Fakhar Imam, said that climate change topped three major challenges Pakistan is faced with at present. Speaking at a ceremony held at Muhammad Nawaz Sharif University of Agriculture (MNSUA) here, Syed Fakhar Imam said that Pakistan missed 15 lac tonnes of wheat target in last yield.
‘The total wheat yield was 2.5 million tonnes. Of it, Punjab contributed lion’s share with 19.4 million tonnes while Sindh shared 3.95 m tonnes, KPK 1.25 m tonnes and rest of protio was produced by Balochistan.’ he explained.
Our departments procured 6.4 m tonnes wheat including Punjab’s 4 m tonnes, Sindh 1.25 m tonnes, PASSCO 1.2 m tonnes, Balochistan.1m tonne whereas KP did not procure, the minister said and added it was purchased at 1400 per mound from farmer and after a short span it was being sold at Rs 1800 -1900 per mound in Karachi and Peshawar.
The shortage was due to international parity price, Fakhar Imam informed adding that when procurement price was Rs 1300 for seven to eight years in our country, the maximum rate was Rs 1150 at international level. Moneyed people invested more this time to earn better profit by selling the wheat locally because they did not bother about 25 per cent Pakistanis living below poverty line in the country, he deplored.
Keeping in view this situation, the govt decided to import wheat, the minister said adding that 4.3 lac tonnes has reached Karachi port from where it had arrived in different cities.
He stated that five crops including wheat, rice, cotton, sugar cane and maize are cultivated on 80 pc land in the country while fruits, veggies, fodder and pulses are grown on rest of 20 pc areas.
Pakistan is importing edible oil of two-and-a half billion dollars annually which poses a big challenge. It turns out to be 85 pc of our consumption while 15 pc is obtained locally out of which 7pc is extracted from cotton seed as by product, Syed Fakhar Imam noted. He deplored that scientists, researchers and farmers could not come up to the level of curtail imports so far for different reasons.
‘It is our policy we should improve our research for this purpose gradually,’ he suggested. Regarding wheat cultivation last year, he stated that it was grown on 22 m acre including 16 m in Punjab, 4 m in Sindh and two m in KPK and Balochistan collectively while our average was 27.7 mounds. It was 31-32 mounds in Bangladesh and 33-34 mounds in India.