NGT directs Centre, states to periodically review steps to stop crop burning
The National Green Tribunal (NGT) has directed the Ministry of Agriculture and the Punjab, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh and Delhi chief secretaries to periodically review steps taken to stop crop burning incidents.

A bench headed by NGT Chairperson Justice Adarsh Kumar Goel said there was a need to adopt a multi-method approach through in-situ and ex-situ management of crop residue to minimise stubble burning incidents.
The green panel directed the states to compile data on instances of stubble burning "appropriately through revenue records" and asked the Centre to "disburse funds well in time" so that they can be utilised by the states.
It directed the Ministry of Agriculture to furnish a status report to the tribunal on or before April 30, 2019, and said it would consider it on May 9.
The tribunal was also informed that the Centre has released Rs 577.11 crore under the Crop Residue Management Scheme, out of which Rs 328.01 crore has been spent on procurement of machinery due to which crop burning incidents have reduced to 12.39 per cent.
The tribunal was informed that the Centre has initiated awareness programmes through "Krishi Vikas Kendras" and the Punjab government has introduced a lesson on stubble burning awareness in the education curriculum.
"Youth clubs have also been involved. Rallies of school children have also been promoted by the government of India. In Delhi, farmers have been trained on the subject. In the state of Haryana, similar awareness programmes have been undertaken and farmers have also been trained which has also been done in Uttar Pradesh," the bench noted.
The NGT was also informed that in Haryana, the Haryana Bio Energy Policy, 2018, was notified on March 9 to provide for bio-based power projects.
"Monitoring is also done at the chief secretary level regularly through field visits and video conferencing and a state level monitoring committee has been constituted to prevent crop residue burning.
The tribunal had earlier said there was a need to find out a long-lasting solution to the problems of stubble burning and directed the chief secretaries of four states to appear before it to explain ways to prevent it.
The green panel was hearing the matter after taking note of a news report published in an English daily titled, "All fiddle as crop stubble burns, farmers say solutions out of reach."
The report had claimed that crop burning shoots up the carbon dioxide levels in the air by 70 per cent.
It had said every year in October, the air quality in Delhi, Punjab and Haryana plummets as farmers set the leftover stubble and loose straw on fire after paddy is harvested using combines.
It had also claimed that over the last two years, the central and state governments have devised a number of measures to prevent crop burning — from slapping fines on farmers to subsidising equipment that allow seeds of the next wheat crop to be planted with the stubble still on the fields.
The tribunal had earlier directed the Secretary of the Ministry of Agriculture to submit a status report within six weeks on providing infrastructural assistance to farmers to stop them from burning crop residue to prevent air pollution.
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