Pune
| October 13, 2016
India
Meteorological Department, Meteorological Department, India Meteorological
Department postman job, Agricultural Meteorology Division, AgriMet, IMD,
weather reports, farmers, India news.
The
India Meteorological Department (IMD) has a new job for postmen. Looking to
collect and deliver weather information to remote villages, the IMD’s
Agricultural Meteorology Division, or AgriMet, wants them to step in and help.
“The
postman will be given a template form when he goes to a village. It will have
basic questions, like cropping pattern of the village, land usage, etc. He has
to fill the form and get phone numbers of some farmers,” Dr Nabansu
Chattopadhyay, deputy director general at AgriMet, said.
The
postal department will feed this information to their servers, and IMD
officials will then access it to churn out circle-level, custom-made weather
and crop forecast.
Chattopadhyay
said the decision to rope in the Postal Department was taken during a
brainstorming session last month on how to disseminate AgriMet advisories to
farmers.
“Timely
and precise weather-based advisories are invaluable for farmers to plan their
crop cycle. Through the Kisan portal and other services, we have managed to
reach 19 million farmers. But we aim to reach all 90 million farmers in India
with custom-made weather and crop advisories,” he said.
Chattopadhyay
said that in places where even mobile network does not exist, a postman could
make all the difference.
The
IMD also plans to mount LED screens at village post offices, where weather and
crop information would be shown through the day. “All the screens will be
connected to the remote server, and information collected by postmen will be
used to churn out the advisories,” Chattopadhyay said.
At
the moment, five villages — in Gujarat, Uttar Pradesh, Uttarkhand, Punjab and
Andhra Pradesh — have been selected for the trial run of the project, and a
budget is being worked out.
According
to Chattopadhyay, of the 1,54,239 post offices in India, 1,39,222 are in rural
areas.
Referring
to an economic impact analysis study by the National Council of Applied
Economic Research, Chattopadhyay said that at least 25 per cent of the farmers
who relied on AgriMet reported an increase in their net income. “The service
has the potential of generating net economic benefit of up to Rs 3.3 lakh crore
when such advisories are fully utilised by all 90 million farmers,” he said.
Apart
from the postal department, AgriMet plans to use services such as farmer’s
cooperatives and agricultural produce market committees to ensure their
advisories reach all corners.
Source
: http://indianexpress.com/
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