<p>Indian farmers have planted 49.9 million hectares (123 million acres) with summer crops, down 10.43 per cent from a year earlier, according to the Ministry of Agriculture & Farmers' Welfare, as monsoon rains taper off after a strong start last month.</p>.<p>Farmers typically start planting summer-sown crops on June 1, when monsoon rains usually reach India. Planting then continues until early August.</p>.<p>Planting of rice, the key summer crop, was at 11.5 million hectares as of July 9 versus 12.6 million hectares in the previous year, the ministry said.</p>.<p>The area planted with cotton was at 8.6 million hectares versus 10.5 million hectares the prior year.</p>.<p>Planting of overall oilseeds, including soybean - the main summer oilseed crop - was at 11.2 million hectares, down from 12.6 million hectares the previous year.</p>.<p>Soybean sowing was at 8.2 million hectares against 9.2 million hectares last year. India is the world's biggest buyer of cooking oils.</p>.<p>Sugarcane sowing in the world's second-biggest sugar producer was almost unchanged at 5.3 million hectares.</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/kharif-crop-sowing-to-pick-up-with-wider-monsoon-coverage-1006835.html" target="_blank">Kharif crop sowing to pick up with wider monsoon coverage</a></strong></p>.<p>Farmers planted protein-rich pulse on 5.2 million hectares against 5.3 million hectares in the previous year.</p>.<p>The figures are provisional and subject to revision as the June-September monsoon season progresses.</p>.<p>India, one of the world's top agriculture producers, has received 5 per cent below average rainfall since June 1, when the four-month rainy season began. Monsoon rains were 46 per cent below average in the week to July 7.</p>.<p>The state-run weather office defines average, or normal, rainfall as between 96 per cent and 104 per cent of a 50-year average of 88 cm for the entire season.</p>.<p>Monsoon rains, which turned patchy at the tail-end of June, will pick up later this week, India's top weather official told <em>Reuters</em> in an interview on Wednesday.</p>.<p>Nearly half of India's farmland has no irrigation and is dependent on monsoon rains that account for 70 per cent-90 per cent of annual rainfall. Farming contributes almost 15 per cent to India's $2.7 trillion economy.</p>
<p>Indian farmers have planted 49.9 million hectares (123 million acres) with summer crops, down 10.43 per cent from a year earlier, according to the Ministry of Agriculture & Farmers' Welfare, as monsoon rains taper off after a strong start last month.</p>.<p>Farmers typically start planting summer-sown crops on June 1, when monsoon rains usually reach India. Planting then continues until early August.</p>.<p>Planting of rice, the key summer crop, was at 11.5 million hectares as of July 9 versus 12.6 million hectares in the previous year, the ministry said.</p>.<p>The area planted with cotton was at 8.6 million hectares versus 10.5 million hectares the prior year.</p>.<p>Planting of overall oilseeds, including soybean - the main summer oilseed crop - was at 11.2 million hectares, down from 12.6 million hectares the previous year.</p>.<p>Soybean sowing was at 8.2 million hectares against 9.2 million hectares last year. India is the world's biggest buyer of cooking oils.</p>.<p>Sugarcane sowing in the world's second-biggest sugar producer was almost unchanged at 5.3 million hectares.</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/kharif-crop-sowing-to-pick-up-with-wider-monsoon-coverage-1006835.html" target="_blank">Kharif crop sowing to pick up with wider monsoon coverage</a></strong></p>.<p>Farmers planted protein-rich pulse on 5.2 million hectares against 5.3 million hectares in the previous year.</p>.<p>The figures are provisional and subject to revision as the June-September monsoon season progresses.</p>.<p>India, one of the world's top agriculture producers, has received 5 per cent below average rainfall since June 1, when the four-month rainy season began. Monsoon rains were 46 per cent below average in the week to July 7.</p>.<p>The state-run weather office defines average, or normal, rainfall as between 96 per cent and 104 per cent of a 50-year average of 88 cm for the entire season.</p>.<p>Monsoon rains, which turned patchy at the tail-end of June, will pick up later this week, India's top weather official told <em>Reuters</em> in an interview on Wednesday.</p>.<p>Nearly half of India's farmland has no irrigation and is dependent on monsoon rains that account for 70 per cent-90 per cent of annual rainfall. Farming contributes almost 15 per cent to India's $2.7 trillion economy.</p>