Gurgaon: With a period of sowing the main rabbi arranged to end in a month, the urea crisis seems to be brewed in Haryana.
Although the Agriculture Minister JP Dalal has claimed that this country offers a large number of Urea, farmers in the Constituency of Loharu’s own Assembly in Bhiwani Regency who are forced to stand in a long queue to get different stories.
In fact, the whole sow season has been damaged by lack of important fertilizer while the government has claimed that everything is fine.
Farmers in Bhiwani have now given Minister of Agriculture An ultimatum, states that if Urea is not available on December 23, they will not let him enter the election and will launch protests.
Ravi Azad, Bku’s young man’s president from Bhiwani, said, “Only two urea bags given to farmers with aadhaar cards and it’s too less than half the farmers get it.
Three urea bags are needed per area of agriculture.
Dalal claims that there are no wrong shortcomings.
Here farmers are depressed because their plants are affected.
“On Monday, the Farmers of Naguran Village blocked the Jind-Chandigarh highway for the lack of urea in the Jind District.
In particular, Haryana recently looked quietly in diammonium phosphate (DAP), which led to the jam and many protests across the state.
Why is urea important? Urea is a nitrogen source.
According to Baljeet Singh Bhayan, an expert, nitrogen is the most important of 16 nutrients since increasing plant growth.
Urea was given first during the penabur period, followed by a 30-day interval to the first irrigation.
“If farmers do not provide the first dose of urea during sowing periods, it can compensate for the first irrigation.
The urea provides a converted nitrogen into a protein to increase plant growth.
This is the first irrigation time, if the urea is postponed now, it will drastically affect the results,” Bhayan said, a retired Professor Chaudhary Charan Singh University.
Are there other options? Bhayan said that the government must focus on other ways if there is a lack of urea.
One way, “is the use of bio-fertilizers that will reduce urea use of 15-20%”.
“Another way is multi-cropping and plant rotation,” he said.