Minas Gerais Cotton Incentive Program


The use of technologies, such as drip irrigation, has guaranteed producers the good old productivity of cotton grown in dryland, without exclusive dependence on climatic conditions. The irrigation work to save crops is an action of the State Government, within the Minas Gerais Cotton Culture Incentive Program (Proalminas) and developed in partnership with the Minas Gerais Association of Cotton Producers (Amipa).

The project to resume cotton cultivation in the north of Minas Gerais involves 126 family farmers from 12 municipalities with traditional ties to the crop. “As the region has a short and concentrated period of rain, the objective of rescue irrigation is to guarantee the supply of water in critical periods of drought, avoiding stress on the plant that compromises its productivity”, explains the Superintendent of Agricultural Development of the Secretariat of Agriculture, Livestock and Supply (Seapa), Carlos Eduardo Bovo. Emater-MG technicians in the region have been receiving training for production certification through the Certifica Minas program.

The work has been carried out for three years in the region with the support of city halls, which pay for the excavation of the tanks, where rainwater is collected and stored. Proalminas finances the acquisition of drip irrigation kits and the blanket for covering the soil. Some properties even rely on solar energy to run the irrigation system.

In a total of nine hectares of cotton, producer Zé Brasil maintained eight hectares in the rainfed system and invested in the irrigation system in one hectare. Its tank has the capacity to store one million liters of “water that comes from above”, used in rescue irrigation, only during critical periods, and not throughout the entire cycle. His average productivity rose from 15 to 150 arrobas per hectare and he already has plans for the future. “Reducing the size of the farm and increasing production – exactly the opposite of what I experienced in times of difficulty. With the free area, I can still invest in livestock farming and diversify the property’s income.”

This is also the expectation of the President of the Catuti Rural Producers Cooperative, Adelino Lopes Martins, known as Dila. “With the organization of planting, correct fertilization at all stages and drip irrigation, the expectation is to reach an average productivity of 350 arrobas per hectare, warm up the group and have more producers investing in the crop in the next harvest”.
 
Irrigated crops are small areas, but the activity has a great socioeconomic impact as a source of income and employment, in a region where there are few crops that resist periods of drought. Cotton is a traditional crop in the region due to its resistance, but it was abandoned by producers years ago due to the boll weevil attack.

The phase is now one of recovery and strengthening, with the use of modern technologies, such as irrigation management and biological control to combat cotton pests, which can also be used to control pests of other crops, such as corn. According to the mayor of Catuti, José Barbosa Filho, the good result of the experiment has attracted the interest of African and South American countries. “Family farming generates employment and income, keeps people in the field and strengthens the economy of the entire region”, he assesses.

Processing and Marketing

Cotton from small producers is sold directly to the textile industry. “A thing impossible to think of 30 years ago, when the producer sold to the middleman or even to a mill owner who benefited the production”, says the cooperative's agricultural technician, José Tibúrcio de Carvalho Filho.

Currently, cotton is processed in a mini-mill installed in the municipality of Mato Verde, which also participates in the cotton recovery project in the North of Minas. The processing capacity is 1.5 thousand tons per year and receives cotton from all producers in the region, regardless of volume. From each 200 kilo bale pressed and processed, a sample is taken to measure quality. “This sample is sent to Amipa's Minas Cotton laboratory, in Uberlândia, where the HVI (High Volume Instrument) Report is prepared, which identifies the intrinsic characteristics of the cotton fiber. The result of this report is required for commercialization with the textile industries”, explains Amipa's agronomist engineer, José Lusimar Eugênio.

The negotiated price follows the market quotation and, through Proalminas, the producer has an increase of 7.85% in value. Textile industries that participate in the program are guaranteed an exemption of 41.66% from the presumed ICMS credit when purchasing certified cotton from producers in Minas Gerais. With the tax benefit, the industry allocates 1.5% of resources to the Cotoniculture Development Fund (Algominas), whose investments allow the hope of all family farmers in the North of Minas to be reborn, who have already witnessed the boom, the decline and are now betting in the resumption of cotton cultivation as a source of income and employment in the region located on the limits of Serra Geral.

Source: Notícias Agrícolas | Author: SEAPA

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