The Guardian Australia

Television­s, fridges and water pumps: why solar power means a brighter future for Gujarat’s salt farmers

- Suchak Patel in Kutch, Gujarat

In the expansive salt marshes of the Little Rann of Kutch the bleakness of the sunburnt, treeless landscape is matched only by the drudgery of the salt farmers who toil there for eight months of the year.

In October, as the monsoon recedes and the flooded salt pans dry out, farmers and their families hop on to trucks and tractors to migrate to the Little Rann of Kutch in Kutch district, Gujarat, where they pitch tarpaulin shelters and begin mining the undergroun­d deposits.

An estimated 10,000 families of farmers, known as agariyas in Gujarati, migrate to the marshes from across the state. They start each season by digging wells to pump out brine using diesel pumps; the brine is then poured into shallow, squarish plots carved on the salt pans and left to evaporate under the sun to produce salt crystals. These marshes produce 30% of India’s inland salt, typically table salt.

Life in the salt marshes is uniquely challengin­g. Drinking water comes not from pipes but tankers, children attend schools inside buses not buildings, and the only avenue to healthcare is weekly mobile vans from the health department. Basic amenities such as an electricit­y grid and toilets are nonexisten­t.

“My entire family, including my brother’s two daughters, lives in the desert these eight months, and my nieces attend primary school in a mobile school bus,” says Bharatbhai Shyamjibha­i Mandviya, 45.

Contracts made with salt traders before each season, where the traders pay an advance to the farmers to buy pumps, diesel, and to meet household expenses mean most farmers start the season in debt, with the harvest income barely enough to cover their costs, let alone allow them to save.

Diesel constitute­s nearly 65% of the input costs in salt farming, and about 1,800 litres of the fuel is needed to produce 750 tonnes of salt, according to Purshottam Sonagra, area manager of nonprofit Vikas Centre for Developmen­t that works with salt producers in the region.

“We have to pump out water from the wells for over 200 days a year, and we relied heavily on diesel to do that,” says Mandviya, adding that he would spend as much as 300,000 rupees (£2,800) on the fuel every season.

But the introducti­on of solar panels to the pans has triggered a significan­t shift in the lives and lifestyles of the impoverish­ed salt workers.

In 2017, the Gujarat government gave solar pumps to salt farmers at nearly 80% subsidy, as part of a larger push to cut emissions and bring down the costs involved in salt production.

“Solar-powered pumps have reduced the cost of salt farming to onethird of what it was,” says Sonagra.

Mandviya has installed three pumps on the salt pan he works on, the savings from which have led to many firsts in his life.

“We have now built a two-bedroom house with a separate hall and a kitchen in Kharaghoda [his home village],” says Mandviya. The new home with tiled walls and built-in cupboards which he will share with his brother and family, is a big upgrade from the kuccha [mud and straw] house they lived in before.

The brothers also bought a motorcycle and a refrigerat­or from the money they managed to save.

With more than 5,500 solar-powered pumps now dotting the region, energy costs have fallen to about 90 rupees to produce one tonne of salt from more than 300 rupees before, according to local campaigner­s. The agariyas such as Mandviya are no longer as dependent on the capital from traders, which gives them greater negotiatin­g power over salt prices.

“I was able to farm without borrowing from traders for the first time last year,” says Bajubhai Vakad from Tikar village in Surendrana­gar district.

Solar pumps and the financial stability they grant have improved access to health, education and mobility, while also offering freedom to salt farmers from an endless work cycle, campaigner­s say.

“Steady supply from the solar panels is powering not only pumps but also television­s. Children of salt makers are switching to state-run ‘edutainmen­t’ programmes to make up for the loss of education,” says Bhavna Harchandan­i, a research scholar at the Indian Institute of Technology Gandhinaga­r, who has tracked the agariya community as part of her studies. The panels offer rare shade for men to relax during breaks, giving women a few moments of privacy in their makeshift homes, she adds.

Sonagra says it was difficult to find an office assistant with basic secondary-school education among agariyas until a few years ago.

“Today, many agariya children attend private schools, complete ITI (vocational) courses, and some manage to go to college. Solar pumps have opened up educationa­l opportunit­ies for the next generation of the community,” he says.

Diesel generators also needed round-the-clock attention, which restricted the movement of agariya families.

“A family member would often have to stay back to monitor the generator. Solar pumps freed us from that; we can now visit fairs as a family,” says Bhupatbhai, an agariya from Kuda village.

Many, such as 65-year-old Santabhai Bamaniya, have traded bicycles for motorbikes. “Earlier, it meant riding the bicycle for a whole day through the desert to get to our village for a social function. Even then, only men could take part. On a motorcycle we can reach the village in two hours flat,” says Bamaniya.

Better mobility has eased the sense of isolation that often defined the agariyas’ stint in the Little Rann of Kutch, and improved access to health services.

Maheshbhai Mansukhbha­i Karodia, 29, recalled a harrowing journey with his pregnant wife on a motorbike a few years ago hours before she gave birth. As solar-powered pumps cut his outgoings, he managed to save for a secondhand car. “It has given us a critical sense of security, especially during health emergencie­s,” he says.

But while the community is reaping the benefits of the push towards solar, concerns have emerged about falling groundwate­r levels. Digging wells and failing to find water has become common, the salt farmers say.

“We have to dig 10 to 12 wells in order to find one with water,” says Devjibhai Tetitya from Nimaknagar. Since

their costs have fallen with the installati­on of solar pumps, workers are drawing more water in the hope of extracting larger amount of salt to boost their incomes.

Mandviya has to dig many more wells to hit water now.

For now, however, he is grateful that solar-powered pumps have made life in the salt desert easier.

This article was first published by the Migration Story, the first newsroom in Indiato focus on the country’sinternal migrant population

 ?? Photograph: Ahmad Masood/ Reuters ?? Agariyas working on a salt pan in the Little Rann of Kutch in the western Indian state of Gujarat. The marshes produce 30% of India’s inland salt.
Photograph: Ahmad Masood/ Reuters Agariyas working on a salt pan in the Little Rann of Kutch in the western Indian state of Gujarat. The marshes produce 30% of India’s inland salt.
 ?? Photograph: Ahmad Masood/ Reuters ?? Salt pan mining was heavily reliant on diesel, but a subsidy to encourage use of solar pumps has cut emissions and the cost of mining.
Photograph: Ahmad Masood/ Reuters Salt pan mining was heavily reliant on diesel, but a subsidy to encourage use of solar pumps has cut emissions and the cost of mining.

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