NUTRITIONAL VALUE OF MILLETS – GEOGRAPHY

News: Explained| How are nutrients in millets affected by processing and polishing?

 

What's in the news?

       The U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) has declared 2023 to be the ‘International Year of Millets’, giving these crops a shot in the arm even as countries worldwide are looking to them for their ability to grow in environmental conditions that the climate crisis is rendering more common.

 

Key takeaways:

       Millets are becoming more popular in India as well because of their low input requirements and high nutritional density, both of which are valuable for a country whose food security is expected to face significant challenges in the coming decades.

       However, the consumption of millets faces one threat that has already overtaken India’s major food crops - grain-processing.

 

Millets:

       Millets are fundamentally grasses.

       They are cultivated worldwide, but especially in the tropical parts of Africa and Asia, as cereal crops.

       Some of the more common varieties include pearl millet (Cenchrus americanus), barnyard millet (Echinochloa utilis), finger millet (Eleusine coracana), and foxtail millet (Setaria italica).

 

Millets and India:

       According to the Agricultural and Processed Foods Development Authority, India is the world’s largest producer of millets.

       In 2021-2022, the country accounted for 40.51% of the world’s pearl millet production and 8.09% of sorghum.

       Within the country, pearl millet made up 60% of all the millet production, sorghum 27%, and ragi 11%.


Significance of Millet Cultivation:

1. Low input cost:

       Cereals are good for the soil, have shorter cultivation cycles and require less cost-intensive cultivation.

2. Climate resilience:

       These unique features make millets suited for and resilient to India’s varied Agro-climatic conditions.

       They can withstand high temperatures, floods, and droughts because they are hardy crops.

3. Drought tolerance:

       Cereals are not water or input-intensive, making them a sustainable strategy for addressing climate change and building resilient agri-food systems.

       They require less water. It is about one-third of rice, wheat and sugarcane.

4. Social benefits:

       Millets possess immense potential in the battle against poverty and provide food, nutrition, fodder and livelihood security. In rainfed farming areas, millet cultivation provides livelihood to 50% of tribal and rural population.

5. Agri-growth:

       India is the largest global producer with a 41% market share. A compound annual growth rate of 4.5% is projected for the global millet market in the coming decade.

6. Restoration of ecosystems and sustainability:

       Land degradation has been a major problem in India.

       Drought-tolerant crops (like millets) with low dependence on chemical inputs would put far less pressure on ecosystems.

7. Biofuel and climate resilience:

       Millets also offer a significant cost advantage over maize as a feedstock for bio-ethanol production.

       They have higher photosynthetic efficiency. Their potential yield is unaffected by higher carbon dioxide levels.

8. Addressing SDGs:

       Millet farming has led to women’s empowerment.

       The Odisha Millet Mission saw 7.2 million women emerge as ‘agri-preneurs’.

9. Nutritional benefits:

       They are a rich source of macronutrients and micronutrients like calcium, protein and iron.

       They have a low glycemic index that prevents type 2 diabetes. They can help to prevent cardiovascular diseases, lower blood pressure.

10. Increased income:

       Boosting millet cultivation will empower the average farmer and achieve the objectives of enhancing incomes and improving crop diversification.

 

Challenges in Millet Cultivation:

1. Effects of Green Revolution:

       The Green Revolution succeeded in making India food sufficient, however, it also led to water-logging, soil erosion, groundwater depletion and the unsustainability of agriculture.

2. Deficit mind-set:

       Current policies are still based on the “deficit” mind-set of the 1960s.

3. Biased policies:

       The procurement, subsidies and water policies are biased towards rice and wheat.

4. Skewed cropping pattern:

       Three crops (rice, wheat and sugarcane) corner 75 to 80 percent of irrigated water.

5. Lack of diversification:

       Diversification of cropping patterns towards cereals, pulses, oilseeds, horticulture is needed for more equal distribution of water, sustainable and climate-resilient agriculture.

6. Lack of marketing facilities:

       In some village areas farmers do not getting the market to sell their crops.

       To sell crops in bulk they have to locate certain small shops since there is no profitable market or demand nearby. This also makes the distribution of crops difficult.

7. Low crop productivity and high labor intensity:

       Cultivating millets requires strong manual labor and is difficult for a single person to do. Added to this is the fact that certain millets turn out to be low in productivity.

8. Lack of investment in millet product development and promotion/ advertisements.

9. Improper suitable processing units close to millet fields:

       It causes local producers to take their produce to distant places. For example, raw grains of Kodo millets produced in Tamil Nadu, need to be transported to Maharashtra for processing.