Intentar ORO - Gratis
TROUBLED TEAK
Down To Earth
|March 01, 2024
Farmers need to be sensitised about right planting materials and cultivation techniques to benefit from high-value teak plantations
TEAK HAS been the flagship species of plantation activities in India. In fact, teak cultivation has been linked to generating substantial income not only for large landowners but also for small and marginal farmers. The rush to set up teak plantation began after the National Forest Policy 1988 was formulated. The policy imposed a ban on the felling of green trees in government-owned forests and recommended meeting the timber demand from private lands. Soon, the prices of teak (Tectona grandis) logs, valued for a variety of commercial purposes including high-end furniture, soared by over 500 per cent.
To cash in on this opportunity, many nursery owners and private agencies came up with teak planting schemes. Records indicate that thousands of companies operated in the market to promote such schemes in India.
Companies promoted tissue culture saplings, claiming that they would earn three to five times more profit than the plants grown using traditional methods from seeds and stumps. Returns were assured in the shortest time span of eight to 12 years. Some companies sold teak saplings at ₹400 to ₹2,500 each and promised returns of ₹50,000 to ₹1,00,000 per tree after 20 years. Such advertisements attracted thousands of farmers to invest in teak plantations, particularly from the rural regions of Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu and Madhya Pradesh. States such as Madhya Pradesh rolled out plantation subsidies, prompting farmers to plant teak with high density. Some private nursery owners also passed off teak seedlings as tissue culture plants. Even today, in the name of tissue culture, seed originated teak saplings are being sold at ₹100-₹250 and are claimed to provide a yield of 1 cubic metre (m³) of timber per tree in eight to 12 years, at a density of 2,500- 4,000 trees per hectare.
Esta historia es de la edición March 01, 2024 de Down To Earth.
Suscríbete a Magzter GOLD para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9000 revistas y periódicos.
¿Ya eres suscriptor? Iniciar sesión
MÁS HISTORIAS DE Down To Earth
Down To Earth
CONSERVED BY COMMUNITY
How a desire to make snow leopard tourism sustainable helped a small Ladakhi settlement became the region's first Community Conserved Area
4 mins
May 16, 2026
Down To Earth
An 'open' and 'shut' case of Al's risky trajectory
Elon Musk's lawsuit against Sam Altman, OpenAl, Microsoft is crucially about open-source versus closed technology for corporate profit
4 mins
May 16, 2026
Down To Earth
Burden of transition
Clean energy transition is once again shifting environmental, human costs to the Global South, finds a UN university investigation
4 mins
May 16, 2026
Down To Earth
One step closer
India attains criticality in fast breeder reactor technology, reaching the second stage of the country's three- stage nuclear programme towards energy security
4 mins
May 16, 2026
Down To Earth
ZESTY SEEDS
Coriander seeds are a traditional antidote to summer heat
3 mins
May 16, 2026
Down To Earth
Sahyadri gets a bird village
Residents of Maharashtra's Pisavare village have embarked on a mission to protect birds in their vicinity through simple practices such as documenting species and building nests
2 mins
May 16, 2026
Down To Earth
CONFLICT IN THE BACKYARD
Across India, farmers are abandoning their fields as conflict with wild and stray animals intensifies. Conservation policy must move beyond protection alone to restore a workable coexistence between people and animals.
18 mins
May 16, 2026
Down To Earth
Capital punishment
Adequate compensation and proper rehabilitation remain a mirage for many displaced by the construction of Chhattisgarh's new capital, Nava Raipur, even two decades after the project began
3 mins
May 16, 2026
Down To Earth
Migrant workers are assets
MIGRATION HAS turned into a potent tool of political warfare across the world. For over a decade, domestic electoral politics across regions, from Europe and North America to Asia and Africa, have fuelled anti-immigration sentiments. This is also increasingly fuelling anti-immigrant vigilantism, as seen widely across Europe in 2015-16, coinciding with the refugee crisis.
2 mins
May 16, 2026
Down To Earth
Petri dish to plate
Synthetic meat production has seen a rise globally, even as environmental benefits of growing foods in laboratory remain debatable
10 mins
May 16, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
