ON sweeping fields once blanketed in lush purple, a thin and bedraggled crop of flowers is all farmers in Indian-administered Kashmir’s saffron-growing region Pampore have to show for this year’s harvest.
Dry conditions blamed on climate change have seen yields of the world’s most expensive spice halved in the past two decades, threatening the future of a cash crop that has brought wealth to the region for 2,500 years.
“These fields used to be like goldmines,” said Abdul Ahad Mir in Pampore, just south of Indian-administered Kashmir’s main city Srinagar.
Saffron has long thrived there, and Ahad’s family was reared in the delicate work of plucking the lucrative but tiny crimson threads from purple crocus flowers.
“In my childhood, we needed 80 men over a week to pick the flowers,” Ahad told AFP.
“Today our family of six finish it in a day.”
Warming temperatures caused by climate change have made rainfall erratic, depleting the thirsty saffron fields of water. Shrinking glaciers across the Himalayan region have also cut water flows to the foothills downstream.
It takes around 160,000 flowers to yield 1kg of the precious spice, which will sell for around US$1,350 (RM5,600) in local markets.
But official figures show that harvests of the so-called “red gold” were just 1.4kg per ha in 2018 – half the figure recorded in 1998.
Mohammad Ramzan Rather said his acreage in Pampore only produced around 30g of the crop this year, down from 2kg 12 years ago.
The harvest season – which lasts for just two weeks at the end of autumn – has also been devastated by the coronavirus pandemic, as well as recent security lockdowns in response to a long-running insurgency in the disputed territory, claimed by both India and arch-rival Pakistan.
Historians said saffron has been cultivated in Kashmir since at least 500 BC.
Locally the spice is added to traditional dishes and used as an ingredient in kehwa, a sweet drink served during special occasions, such as marriages.
Elsewhere in the world, it is prized for its use in cooking and cosmetics and can fetch prices of more than US$10,000 per kg on the international market.
Nearly 90% of the world’s saffron is grown in Iran, but experts consider Kashmir’s crop to be superior for its deep red colour and distinct aroma.
In 2010, Indian authorities sought to halt the impact of climate change by launching a US$54 million fund to introduce modern agricultural technology to farmers. – AFP, December 22, 2020.
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