Agriculture Ministry reviews farmers’ losses amid adverse weather conditions
UPSC Study Note: Agriculture Ministry Reviews Farmers' Losses Amid Adverse Weather Conditions
1. At a Glance
- A high-level review meeting chaired by Union Agriculture & Farmers' Welfare Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan was held at Krishi Bhawan, New Delhi on 21 March 2026 to assess crop damage from extreme weather events across India. [S1]
- The event spotlights India's chronic vulnerability to weather-induced agrarian distress — a perennial UPSC theme intersecting GS-III (agriculture, disaster management) and GS-II (welfare schemes, Centre-State coordination).
- The episode activates three major policy architectures simultaneously: crop insurance (PMFBY), government procurement (MSP), and disaster-relief mechanisms (SDRF/NDRF) — all frequently tested.
- IMD's forecast of two more western disturbances at the time of the meeting signals an evolving multi-hazard agricultural crisis in the Rabi-to-Kharif transition period. [S1]
2. Why in the News
- On Friday, 21 March 2026, the Agriculture Ministry held an emergency review after heavy rain, hailstorms, and other adverse weather hit multiple Indian states, threatening standing Rabi crops (especially wheat). [S1]
- The Union Minister instructed officials to ensure insurance claims are prepared "properly and scientifically" and that central schemes reach farmers in a time-bound, coordinated manner. [S1]
- IMD indicated two more western disturbances in the near term; the Ministry simultaneously flagged the imminent start of wheat and paddy procurement. [S1]
- The Centre also reaffirmed its commitment to procure all pulses produced by farmers — an unusual blanket pledge, likely reflecting recent price volatility. [S1]
3. Background & Evolution
| Year | Milestone |
|---|---|
| 1965 | Agriculture Insurance Company (AIC) of India established; early crop insurance pilots begin |
| 1985 | Comprehensive Crop Insurance Scheme (CCIS) — India's first national scheme |
| 1999 | National Agricultural Insurance Scheme (NAIS) replaces CCIS |
| 2007 | Modified NAIS (MNAIS) introduced for faster claim settlement |
| 2016 | Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana (PMFBY) launched; replaces NAIS and MNAIS — standardised premium, actuarial rates, technology-driven assessment |
| 2020 | PMFBY restructured — made voluntary for farmers (was compulsory for loanee farmers); State flexibility enhanced |
| 2024–26 | Cabinet approves continuation of PMFBY and RWBCIS till 2025-26 with total outlay of ₹69,515.71 crore [S2] |
| March 2026 | Review meeting triggered by multi-state weather disaster during Rabi harvest season [S1] |
- Western disturbances (WDs): Extra-tropical weather systems originating in the Mediterranean; responsible for winter-spring rainfall, snowfall in northwest India — critical to Rabi crops but can turn destructive at high intensity.
- Predecessor mechanisms: SDRF (State Disaster Response Fund) and NDRF (National Disaster Response Fund) under Disaster Management Act, 2005 are activated for immediate farmer relief prior to insurance settlements.
4. Core Static Facts
Ministry / Implementing Bodies - Nodal Ministry: Ministry of Agriculture & Farmers' Welfare (MoAFW) - Crop Insurance Implementation: Agriculture Insurance Company of India (AIC) + empanelled private insurers - Weather Data Provider: India Meteorological Department (IMD) under Ministry of Earth Sciences - Procurement Agency: FCI (Food Corporation of India) for wheat and rice; NAFED / NCCF for pulses
Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana (PMFBY) — Key Numbers [S2] - Launched: 18 February 2016 - Premium paid by farmer: 2% of sum insured for Kharif; 1.5% for Rabi; 5% for commercial/horticultural crops - Balance premium: shared by Centre and State (50:50 in most cases; 90:10 for North-East) - Coverage unit: Village/Village Panchayat level (not district) — for major crops - Budget approved (Cabinet, 2024): ₹69,515.71 crore for continuation through 2025-26 [S2] - Claims settled via Remote Sensing, Drones, Crop Cutting Experiments (CCEs) - Mandatory for: KCC (Kisan Credit Card) loanee farmers (voluntary post-2020 restructuring for others)
Restructured Weather Based Crop Insurance Scheme (RWBCIS) - Triggered by weather indices (rainfall, temperature, humidity) — not actual yield loss - Faster settlement than PMFBY; suitable for horticultural crops
Enabling Framework - Disaster Management Act, 2005 — SDRF/NDRF activation - Agricultural Produce Market Committee (APMC) Acts — State-level procurement - Price Support Scheme (PSS) — Centre procures pulses, oilseeds at MSP via NAFED
Wheat & Paddy Procurement (context) - Wheat procurement under Central Pool begins typically April–May (Rabi harvest) - MSP for wheat 2025-26: ₹2,275/quintal (as per Cabinet approval cycle)
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Economic
- Hailstorm/rain damage during March (Rabi maturation stage) is uniquely damaging — crops are closest to harvest and maximum insurance value; losses translate directly into income shocks for ~54% of India's workforce dependent on agriculture.
- Delayed insurance settlements historically create debt-spiral risks — farmers take distress loans before payouts arrive; PMFBY's 2020 tech-upgrade aimed to cut settlement time but implementation gaps persist. [S2]
- Wheat is India's second-largest food crop; damage affects food inflation (CPI-Food) and central pool stocks, with downstream effects on PDS and export policy.
Social
- Marginal and small farmers (< 2 ha, ~86% of all holdings) bear disproportionate losses — limited owned assets, higher dependence on monsoon/Rabi cycles, and lower insurance penetration.
- Hailstorm damage is concentrated in the Indo-Gangetic Plain and parts of Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh — regions with high agrarian distress and documented farmer suicide correlations with crop failures.
- The Minister's explicit reference to "farmer brothers and sisters" underscores the political salience of agrarian distress, particularly in an election-sensitive environment.
Environmental
- Western disturbances (WDs) are intensifying in frequency and rainfall intensity — attributed to warming of the Arabian Sea and shifts in mid-latitude jet streams linked to global climate change.
- Hailstorms destroy standing crops physically, unlike drought (which allows progressive adaptation); no irrigation infrastructure can offset this.
- El Niño conditions (flagged for Kharif 2026) compound already-stressed Rabi outcomes — the Ministry separately noted El Niño concerns placing the Centre on alert. [S3]
Legal / Constitutional
- Article 48 (DPSP): State shall endeavour to organise agriculture and animal husbandry on modern scientific lines.
- Article 282: Centre may make grants to States for any public purpose — basis for SDRF top-ups.
- Disaster Management Act, 2005 (Section 46/48): Establishes NDRF and SDRF; State Governments must utilise SDRF for crop damage relief as per 15th Finance Commission norms.
- Insurance claims under PMFBY are governed by the Insurance Act, 1938 and IRDAI regulations.
Administrative
- The review meeting highlights a Centre-State coordination problem: insurance companies, State agriculture departments, IMD, and FCI must act in parallel — delays at any node cascade.
- Crop Cutting Experiments (CCEs) required for yield-based claims are State-administered — understaffing and methodology disputes are chronic bottlenecks.
- The Minister's directive to "coordinate outreach of central schemes" signals that last-mile delivery failure (not scheme design) is the primary administrative concern in 2026. [S1]
Ethical / Governance
- Moral hazard and adverse selection in crop insurance: wealthier, irrigated farmers tend to be better enrolled; marginal farmers with highest need are least covered.
- Transparency in CCE methodology and insurance company claim rejection rates remain governance flashpoints — PMFBY saw several States withdraw due to disputes with private insurers (2019–21).
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- 2024 (Cabinet): Approved continuation of PMFBY and RWBCIS through 2025-26 with a total budget of ₹69,515.71 crore. [S2]
- Kharif 2025: National Kharif Conference chaired by Shivraj Singh Chouhan reviewed El Niño risk; seed availability confirmed at 192 lakh quintals against requirement of 173 lakh quintals (11% surplus). [S3]
- 2025 Kharif review: MoAFW confirmed IMD forecast of below-normal Southwest Monsoon at ~90% of LPA under El Niño influence — contingency crop plans activated. [S3]
- March 2026: High-level meeting at Krishi Bhawan assesses multi-state hailstorm and heavy rain damage to Rabi crops; IMD warns of two additional western disturbances in coming days. [S1]
- March 2026: Minister signals imminent wheat and paddy procurement and unconditional pulse procurement pledge. [S1]
7. Prelims Hooks
- PMFBY was launched on 18 February 2016, replacing NAIS and MNAIS.
- Farmer's premium under PMFBY: 2% for Kharif, 1.5% for Rabi, 5% for horticulture.
- Cabinet approved continuation of PMFBY + RWBCIS till 2025-26 with budget of ₹69,515.71 crore. [S2]
- Post-2020 restructuring made PMFBY voluntary (earlier compulsory for KCC loanee farmers).
- RWBCIS is triggered by weather indices, not actual yield loss — faster settlement than PMFBY.
- Coverage unit under PMFBY is village/village panchayat level for major crops (not district).
- IMD falls under the Ministry of Earth Sciences — not the Ministry of Agriculture.
- Western disturbances originate from the Mediterranean Sea / Caspian region and travel eastward; they bring winter precipitation to northwest India.
- Pulse procurement by the Centre is channelled through NAFED and NCCF under the Price Support Scheme (PSS).
- SDRF and NDRF are constituted under the Disaster Management Act, 2005 — primary instruments for immediate farmer relief before insurance payouts.
- Kharif seed reserve for 2026: National seed reserve of 1.74 lakh quintals maintained by Centre. [S3]
- North-East States pay only 10% of premium share under PMFBY (Centre pays 90%, against 50:50 for other States).
- The nodal Ministry for PMFBY is Ministry of Agriculture & Farmers' Welfare — not the Finance Ministry or IRDAI.
8. Mains Relevance
| GS Paper | Syllabus Heading |
|---|---|
| GS-III | Indian Economy — Agriculture; Food Security; Crop Insurance; Disaster Management and Agriculture |
| GS-II | Government Policies and Interventions; Centre-State Relations; Welfare Schemes for Vulnerable Sections |
| GS-I | (marginal) — Geography of India: climate patterns, western disturbances |
Plausible Mains Question Stems:
- "Despite successive reforms, crop insurance in India continues to fail marginal farmers. Critically examine the design and implementation gaps in PMFBY with reference to recent weather-related crop losses." (GS-III, 15 marks)
- "Weather-induced agrarian distress requires a multi-agency, multi-scheme response. Analyse the coordination challenges between Central Ministries, State Governments, IMD, and insurance companies in addressing farmer losses." (GS-II/III, 15 marks)
- "The intensification of western disturbances and erratic monsoons due to climate change poses a structural threat to India's food security. Discuss the adaptive policy measures needed." (GS-III, 15 marks)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana (PMFBY) — full scheme architecture | Direct scheme activated in this event; examinable in detail |
| Minimum Support Price (MSP) and procurement operations | Minister flagged wheat/paddy/pulse procurement in the same meeting |
| Western Disturbances — geography and climate impact | The meteorological driver of the crisis; Prelims-relevant |
| SDRF / NDRF — Disaster Management Act, 2005 | Immediate relief mechanism for crop damage before insurance settlement |
| El Niño / La Niña and Indian Monsoon | Flagged for Kharif 2026; linked to food inflation and agrarian risk |
| PM-KISAN and Kisan Credit Card (KCC) | Intersecting welfare schemes for the same beneficiary population |
| National Food Security Act, 2013 (NFSA) | Wheat/paddy procurement directly feeds Central Pool → PDS under NFSA |
| Agricultural Census data — farm size and fragmentation | Essential context for understanding why small/marginal farmers bear highest risk |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- IMD under wrong Ministry: Aspirants often place IMD under MoAFW or MoEFCC — it is under the Ministry of Earth Sciences.
- PMFBY vs. RWBCIS conflation: PMFBY covers yield loss (post-harvest assessment via CCE); RWBCIS covers weather-index triggers — they are distinct schemes, both under MoAFW.
- Mandatory vs. voluntary confusion: PMFBY was made voluntary for non-loanee farmers from 2020; it remains effectively compulsory for KCC loanee farmers. Pre-2020 notes may mislead.
- SDRF vs. PMFBY: SDRF provides immediate disaster relief by State governments; PMFBY provides insurance-based compensation — they are parallel, not substitutes. Confusing the two is a common trap.
- Premium cost-sharing ratio: Many aspirants recall a uniform 50:50 Centre-State split — the actual ratio is 90:10 for North-East States and varies for UTs; always qualify.
11. Sources
- [S1] "The Agriculture Ministry reviews farmers' losses amid adverse weather conditions" — The Hindu, 21 March 2026 — (Tier 4; also serves as the primary article/event source) — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-03-21/
- [S2] "The Union Cabinet has approved the continuation of Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana and Restructured Weather Based Crop Insurance Scheme till 2025-26 with a total budget of ₹69,515.71 crore" — PIB, MoAFW — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleaseIframePage.aspx?PRID=2089410 — (Tier 1)
- [S3] "El Niño concerns put Centre on alert, farmers' interests to be protected at all costs: Shri Shivraj Singh Chouhan" — PIB — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2268156 — (Tier 1)
- [S4] "Centre fully vigilant in farmers' interests: Union Agriculture Minister Shri Shivraj Singh Chouhan reviews Kharif preparedness" — PIB — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2253320 — (Tier 1)
- [S5] "Union Agriculture Minister Shri Shivraj Singh Chouhan takes cognisance of heavy rainfall, hailstorms in several states" — PIB — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2249098 — (Tier 1)