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| Relevance: GS Paper III — Major Crops, Cropping Patterns, Water Resources, E-technology for Farmers | Source: The Indian Express, 2026 |
Direct-Seeded Rice (DSR): A Smarter Way to Grow Paddy and Save Water
1 · What is happening?
| Due to El Nino conditions causing weaker monsoons, many paddy (rice) farmers in India are shifting to a new method called Direct-Seeded Rice (DSR). This technique is also locally known as the tar-wattar method, which means sowing seeds in moist, rather than flooded, soil. Farmers are making this shift to solve two massive problems: First, groundwater levels in Punjab and Haryana (India’s ‘rice bowls’) are dropping dangerously fast. Second, hiring farm labourers from UP and Bihar during the June-July planting season has become very expensive and unreliable. |
2 · Traditional Method vs. Direct-Seeded Rice (DSR)
| The Old Way: Traditionally, farmers flood their fields and repeatedly plough the wet soil to make it muddy and sticky (a process called puddling). Then, they manually pluck young rice plants from a nursery and plant them in this muddy field (transplanting). The New Way (DSR) skips both these exhausting steps. |
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Traditional Method
Puddled Transplanted Rice
A nursery is grown first, then small plants are manually moved to a flooded field. This requires massive amounts of water (over 2 lakh litres per acre) and the field is kept flooded for weeks.
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DSR Method
Direct Seeding
Seeds are planted directly into moist soil using a machine called a Lucky Seeder. No nursery, no flooding, no manual planting. It saves about 15–20% of water.
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The Challenges
Weeds and Soil Issues
Because there is no standing water to choke them, weeds grow rapidly. It also requires heavy clay soil to hold moisture, and seeds left on the surface can be eaten by birds and rats.
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Why India Needs This
Saving Water and Air
Punjab and Haryana are running out of groundwater. Also, traditionally flooded rice fields release a lot of methane (a dangerous greenhouse gas). DSR significantly cuts down both water use and methane emissions.
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- Extra Time for Farmers: DSR crops are ready to harvest 7–10 days earlier. This gives farmers extra time to clear the leftover paddy stalks (stubble) before planting winter wheat, which can help reduce stubble burning (a major cause of winter pollution).
- Huge Cost Savings: Hiring laborers to manually plant rice costs about ₹5,000–6,000 per acre. DSR completely removes this cost since machines do the work.
- Government Rewards: To encourage this, Haryana pays farmers ₹4,500 per acre directly into their bank accounts. Punjab offers ₹1,500 per acre.
- Aligning with National Goals: DSR perfectly matches the central government’s irrigation scheme, PMKSY, which promotes the idea of “Per Drop More Crop”.
- The Punjab Problem: Despite the benefits, DSR adoption is very slow in Punjab. Because the state gives farmers free electricity to pump water, many don’t feel the financial pressure to save water.
| UPSC Prelims Quick Facts | ||||||||||||||
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| MCQ Practice Question |
Q. With reference to the Direct-Seeded Rice (DSR) technique, consider the following statements:
Which of the statements given above is/are correct? |
Answer: (a) 1 only
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