Cherry harvesting is about to start in the Valley, but despite a good crop, the growers of the perishable fruit are a worried lot. While they are expecting 13,000 metric tonnes (MTS) yield, growers fear they may not be able to export the fruit or find buyers outside due to the shut mandis/markets owing to the lockdown.
Bashir Ahmad Basheer, Chairman of the Kashmir Valley Fruit Growers-Cum-Dealers Union, said 60 per cent of the cherry produce was exported to Mumbai in the past years.
โSixty per cent produceโฆmainly Makhmali and Mishri varieties of cherry, used to be transported to Mumbai through air cargo or by railwayโฆ20 per cent was transported to mandis in Delhi and other places and 10 per cent to Punjab. Unfortunately, Mumbai fruit mandi is not properly functional and we donโt expect to send 60 per cent produce there this year as it has been hit hard by the coronavirus,โ Basheer said.
He said transporting the entire produce to New Delhi was not advisable either, as it would not fetch good prices. Even as the growers association is holding deliberations with the authorities, to work out ways to avoid losses, Basheer said they had urged the government to fix Rs 100 as minimum support price (MSP) per kilo for cherry.
He said a back-up plan, in case the fruit could not be exported, too should be kept ready in which the fruit should be available for sale in Fruit Marketing Complex, Parimpora, Srinagar.
Businessman Showkat Chowdhary, who is also a cherry grower, said harvesting would commence in a weekโs time.
โHarvesting will start within a week and since cherry is a perishable fruit, it is just a game of one month. The government should arrange airlifting of the fruit in cargo planes,โ he said.
They were willing to bear the one-way cost to airlift cherries to New Delhi and Mumbai, Chowdhary said.
An official of the Horticulture Department said deliberations were underway to ensure smooth movement of cherry exports. He says Cherry is grown on the city outskirts, like Nishat and Harwan, besides other parts of central Kashmir, like Lar, Dara and Kangan. The fruit is also grown in Tangmarg and Baramulla in north, besides Shopian in south Kashmir.
The official said last year, hailstorms had damaged the cherry crop but still, over 11,000 MTS was yielded. Similarly, 11,289 and 11,789 MTS were yielded in 2017 and 2018, respectively.
Article from: https://www.tribuneindia.com/news/j-k/lockdown-gives-nightmares-to-cherry-growers-84427/