1. Home
  2. News

TNC India Launches Crop Residue Management Connect Portal for Punjab Farmers

CRM Connect would not only help farmers with access and availability-related issues of CRM machines but would also provide valuable information related to the proper usage and handling and share best practices from progressive farmers on the usage of these machines.

Sandeep Kr Tiwari
CRM Connect was launched by Shri Gurpreet Singh Bassi, MLA, West Ludhiana ,Dr S S Gosal, Vice Chancellor, PAU and Others.
CRM Connect was launched by Shri Gurpreet Singh Bassi, MLA, West Ludhiana ,Dr S S Gosal, Vice Chancellor, PAU and Others.

The Nature Conservancy (TNC) India with the support of IBM launched CRM Connect, a web-based portal for farmers and the agricultural community in Punjab to address crop residue burning at Punjab Agricultural University, Ludhiana during Farmer Fair.

CRM Connect was launched by Gurpreet Singh Bassi, MLA, West Ludhiana; Dr S S Gosal, Vice Chancellor, PAU; Dr Gurwinder Singh, Director Agriculture, Punjab; Dr Ashok Kumar, Director Extension, PAU; Dr Manjeet Kang, former VC, PAU; and progressive farmer Pavitra Pal Singh Pangli in the presence of the Crop Residue Management (CRM) team from The Nature Conservancy India.

CRM Connect aims to provide holistic information to farmers and to the agricultural community at large with nuanced details related to the access and availability of crop residue management (CRM) machines, knowledge on the proper usage and handling of different CRM technologies as well as connect farmers who want to transition to no-burn agriculture with progressive farmers who have already been using CRM machines and with CRM service providers.

With only a few weeks left for the paddy harvesting and wheat sowing season, farmers and CRM machine providers are gearing up to manage almost 12-15 million tonnes of paddy residue in Northwest India within a short span of three to four weeks. However, access to CRM machines is not easy for all farmers.

Dr Annapurna Vancheswaran, Managing Director, TNC India, said “There are many farmers who want to transition to no-burn agriculture but face hindrances as they cannot purchase CRM machines due to the high costs. These farmers can rent the machines from service providers, but it seems to be a difficult process as the harvesting then needs to be timed with the availability of the machines, which may not be feasible all the time. CRM Connect would help these farmers with information on the availability of service providers and CRM machines near them through an interactive map available on mobile phones, making the process convenient.”

CRM Connect would not only help farmers with access and availability-related issues of CRM machines but would also provide valuable information related to the proper usage and handling and share best practices from progressive farmers on the usage of these machines. 

Another thing worth noting is that this portal is available in Gurmukhi script for ease of use in the state. Presently, the portal is available in one block of Patiala district where it is being tested, and we plan to scale this portal to all the districts of Punjab and Haryana by next year.

“The IBM Sustainability Accelerator program was built with the purpose of helping communities most vulnerable to environmental challenges and we have been proud to partner with The Nature Conservancy India to develop CRM Connect to mitigate crop residue burning across India,” said Manoj Balachandran, IBM Corporate Social Responsibility Leader - India & South Asia. “In co-creating this solution with TNC India using elements of IBM Environmental Intelligence Suite on IBM Cloud, we look forward to seeing how farmers across India can be empowered with more data and tools to transition to no-burn agricultural practices.”

As social networking and online knowledge platforms have opened many opportunities for farmers, CRM Connect would hopefully lead to agricultural sustainability in Northwest India, thereby reducing costs for farmers and air pollution at the same time.

Take this quiz to know more about radish Take a quiz
Share your comments
FactCheck in Agriculture Project

Subscribe to our Newsletter. You choose the topics of your interest and we'll send you handpicked news and latest updates based on your choice.

Subscribe Newsletters