Cotton Sowing Picks up in July as Monsoon Revives, Still Below Last Year

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New Delhi: Cotton sowing in India, which had lagged 23 per cent behind last year through the kharif season, has gained pace in July as the southwest monsoon strengthens in key growing states such as Maharashtra, Agriculture Commissioner P K Singh said on Thursday. ​

Cotton acreage stood at 63.18 lakh hectare as on July 5, against 82 lakh hectare planted at the same period last year, though the gap has narrowed as rains improve, Singh told PTI. “The monsoon has improved. It is raining well in July and sowing has picked up,” he said. ​

Cotton is sown twice a year in India and the planting window varies by region, Singh said. Sowing typically begins in Punjab and Haryana before spreading to Tamil Nadu. The window usually closes by July 15 but has been extended to July 30 this season because of the delayed monsoon. ​
A trader in Ahmedabad said cotton acreage in Gujarat had risen sharply after lagging as recently as last week, with Gujarat, Maharashtra, Karnataka and Madhya Pradesh all receiving good rains.
Some farmers may be shifting from paddy to cotton, he said, since cotton and pulses offer better price prospects than paddy. ​
In Maharashtra, farmers who had sown soybean reported poor germination and are now turning to cotton as rains return, the trader added. ​
India’s major cotton belts are Gujarat, Maharashtra and Madhya Pradesh in the central zone, followed by the northern states of Punjab, Haryana and Rajasthan, and Telangana, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka and Tamil Nadu in the southern zone. ​
Cotton production for 2025-26 stood at 290.91 lakh bales of 170 kg each, down from 297.24 lakh bales in 2024-25, according to the agriculture ministry’s latest estimate. ​

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