Wednesday, June 17, 2026
ADVT 
India

Farmers Can't Give Up Stubble Burning Completely: Amarinder

Darpan News Desk IANS, 15 Nov, 2017 12:25 PM
    Punjab Chief Minister Amarinder Singh on Wednesday said "farmers cannot be expected to give up crop residue burning completely", till the time they are provided viable solutions.
     
     
    The statement comes on a day when Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal met his Haryana counterpart Manohar Lal Khattar to discuss air pollution and stubble burning.
     
     
    Asserting that a long-term solution was needed to arrest the problem of crop residue burning, the Punjab chief minister said the state government was looking for affordable solutions for this problem.
     
     
    Notably, farmers of Punjab and Haryana have been blamed for the rising air pollution level in northern states including Delhi triggered by their stubble burning.
     
     
    "We are engaged in spreading awareness among farmers on the need to stop burning the stubble, not just for the sake of others but also for their own sake, as they are the worst affected by the air pollution triggered by such burning.
     
     
     
     
    "However, till we are able to offer them viable solutions, we cannot really expect them to completely give up burning crop residue since it's a matter of their livelihood and survival," Amarinder Singh told in an interview.
     
     
    The Punjab CM has refused to meet Kejriwal after the latter sought a meeting with him in Chandigarh.
     
     
    He urged the AAP national convener to refrain from trying to "politicise" such a serious issue.
     
     
    Amarinder Singh said he failed to understand why the Delhi chief minister was trying to force his hand, knowing well that any such discussion on the issue would be "meaningless and futile".
     
     
    The Punjab CM has been pressing hard for intervention of the Centre to convene a meeting of chief ministers of the affected states along with the Union ministers for agriculture, food and environment to find out a long-term solution to stubble burning issue.
     
     
    Amarinder Singh had even suggested Prime Minister Narendra Modi to give a bonus of Rs 100 per quintal as an incentive to farmers so they can manage the crop residue scientifically.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Patient's Relative Stabs Male Nurse With Scissors In Mumbai

    Some staff members came to the nurse's rescue before Lote could do more damage.

    Patient's Relative Stabs Male Nurse With Scissors In Mumbai

    11 Indian-Americans Feature In Forbes's List Of Best Venture Capitalists

    11 Indian-Americans Feature In Forbes's List Of Best Venture Capitalists
      The list has been topped by Jim Goetz, Partner in Sequoia Capital. He retains the top spot three years after the monumental sale of messaging giant WhatsApp to Facebook for nearly $22 billion.

    11 Indian-Americans Feature In Forbes's List Of Best Venture Capitalists

    Elderly Couple Held Captive At Home, Money And Jewellery Worth 3 Lakh Robbed

    Elderly Couple Held Captive At Home, Money And Jewellery Worth 3 Lakh Robbed
    The couple's elder son stays in the US and their younger son is away in Bengaluru for some work for the last one month, police said.

    Elderly Couple Held Captive At Home, Money And Jewellery Worth 3 Lakh Robbed

    Adiyogi Bust Enters Guinness World Records

    Adiyogi Bust Enters Guinness World Records
    The bust of "Adiyogi," which was unveiled by Prime Minister Narendra Modi on February 24, has now become the worlds largest such as certified by Guinness World Records.

    Adiyogi Bust Enters Guinness World Records

    NASA, ISRO Team Up To Inspect 'Oldest Civilisation' Site In Haryana

    NASA, ISRO Team Up To Inspect 'Oldest Civilisation' Site In Haryana
    Archaeologists have recovered artefacts pre-dating the Harappan Civilisation from the site, located in village Kunal in Fatehabad district.

    NASA, ISRO Team Up To Inspect 'Oldest Civilisation' Site In Haryana

    'Father Of India's Wheat Revolution' Dilbagh Singh Athwal Dies In USA

    'Father Of India's Wheat Revolution' Dilbagh Singh Athwal Dies In USA
    Often called the 'Father of Wheat Revolution', agriculture scientist Dilbagh Singh Athwal has passed away in the US, a Punjab Agricultural University (PAU) official said on Monday. He was 89.

    'Father Of India's Wheat Revolution' Dilbagh Singh Athwal Dies In USA