సజ్జ (పెర్ల్ మిల్లెట్): the climate champion of arid India
Bajra or pearl millet (Pennisetum glaucum) is grown on roughly 7.0 million hectares producing about 10.8 million tonnes annually (DES 2024-25), with Rajasthan alone accounting for 45% of national output. Among India's principal cereals, bajra holds the lowest seasonal water requirement (~310 mm) and the highest heat tolerance — anthesis withstands 42°C, well beyond wheat's 32°C limit. It is the dominant grain of the arid Thar, semi-arid Aravallis and the dry plateaus of western Madhya Pradesh and Saurashtra. The 2025-26 MSP is ₹2,775/q (PIB 28 May 2025), a 5% YoY hike, and although procurement under PSS is limited, the price floor matters because bajra is a smallholder grain — 92% of growers cultivate less than 2 hectares (NSSO).
State-by-state geography
Rajasthan (45%): the heart of Indian bajra — Jodhpur, Barmer, Pali, Nagaur and Sikar. Sown June-25 to July-25 on the first significant monsoon shower. Rainfed yields 8–14 q/ha; arid west (rainfall 200–350 mm) ranges 6–10 q/ha. HHB-67 Improved (65-day duration) is the workhorse — its short cycle escapes terminal drought when monsoon withdraws by mid-September. NAFED PSS procurement in 2024-25 reached ~2.8 LMT in Jodhpur-Barmer-Bikaner mandis.
Uttar Pradesh (18%): western and Bundelkhand belt — Agra, Mathura, Etawah, Jalaun. Yields 12–18 q/ha with one-two life-saving irrigations from tubewells. Pusa-23 and Pusa-1201 hybrids preferred for medium-duration 80-85d types.
Haryana (10%): southern dryland — Mahendragarh, Bhiwani, Rewari, Hisar. Yields 14–22 q/ha; HHB-67 Improved and Pusa-23 dominant. Stover from bajra is high-value dairy fodder — Haryana dairy density elevates kadbi revenue.
Gujarat (8%): Kachchh, Banaskantha, Mahesana dryland. Mostly rainfed at 10–15 q/ha. Iron-biofortified AHB-1200Fe is gaining ground via NHM and Atmanirbhar Krishi Yojana.
Biofortification — Dhanashakti and the iron leap
Pearl millet biofortification is the most successful nutrition intervention in Indian agriculture. ICRISAT's Dhanashakti (HHB-272) contains 75 mg/kg iron and 39 mg/kg zinc — almost 2x the national average. Released in 2014 and joined byAHB-1200Fe (2018) and HHB-311 (2020), biofortified cultivars now cover ~12% of national bajra area. Under PM-POSHAN, FCI and NAFED give procurement preference to biofortified grain at the same MSP — incentivising multiplication by seed companies (Nuziveedu, Mahyco) and ICAR-IIMR Hyderabad.
Agronomy — short window, low input, high resilience
Pearl millet sowing is rain-triggered: in Jodhpur the typical first sowing is the day after the first 20 mm rainfall event past June-25. Seed rate is 3–5 kg/ha (low because of small seed size; ~2 g per 1000 seeds) at 45 × 15 cm. Seed treatment with metalaxyl 35SD at 6 g/kg seed protects against downy mildew (Sclerospora graminicola) — the single largest disease threat. Nutrient requirement is 80:40:30 NPK (kg/ha) for irrigated hybrids, lower for rainfed (40:20:20). Bajra responds well to FYM at 5 t/ha — typical on smallholder farms.
Water management: rainfed crop relies entirely on monsoon. Where supplementary irrigation is possible (Hisar, Mahendragarh tubewells), one critical irrigation at tillering and another at panicle initiation can lift yield 30–50%. The FAO-56 Kc curve for pearl millet is Kc-ini 0.30, Kc-mid 1.00, Kc-end 0.30 — sharply lower demand than paddy or maize. Total seasonal ETc on a 75-day crop is ~280–320 mm.
Pests, diseases and the harvest
Downy mildew remains the most important disease — losses can exceed 50% in susceptible varieties. Resistance is built into all modern hybrids. Ergot (Claviceps fusiformis) appears under cool wet flowering conditions; the alkaloid contamination risk requires manual roguing of sclerotia-bearing ear-heads or carbendazim 0.1% spray.Stem borer (Chilo partellus) attacks similar to maize — ETL 10% dead-hearts; cypermethrin 10EC granular application controls. Birds(parakeets and quelea) cause 5–15% yield loss at grain-fill — mechanical scaring or bird-resistant compact-panicle types (Pusa-415) help.
Cost of cultivation and economics
CACP places bajra C2 cost at ~₹1,750/q on the national average (2022-23 crop year). Against MSP ₹2,775/q, the C2 margin is ~58% — among the highest for any cereal — but yield variability dominates. A Jodhpur smallholder yielding 8 q/ha rainfed at ₹2,500/q mandi (slightly below MSP) realises ₹20,000/ha gross against ₹8,000/ha cash cost — net cash margin ₹12,000/ha or ₹4,800/acre. The kadbi (stover) is the equally important second product — sold to dairies at ₹4–6/kg in Haryana, ₹2–3/kg in Rajasthan, adding another ₹8,000–15,000/ha. The economics of bajra are unintelligible without the stover.
Procurement, schemes and the millet ecosystem
NAFED PSS procurement under Atmanirbhar Krishi Yojana reached ~3.5 LMT in 2023-24, mostly Rajasthan and Haryana. PM-POSHAN added bajra to the mid-day meal in 2023. Rajasthan's Mukhyamantri Bajra Protsahan Yojana pays a ₹500/q bonus on first 5 q per farmer at notified mandis (Jodhpur, Bikaner, Pali, Nagaur, Sikar) — effectively pushing farmer realisation to ₹3,275/q for smallholders. PM-KISAN, PMFBY and KCC apply standardly.
Climate resilience and the long horizon
Pearl millet is the most climate-resilient of India's major cereals — its C4 metabolism, deep tap-root and tolerance to high vapour pressure deficit make it the natural fit for warming-drying western India. NICRA modelling suggests bajra's competitive zone expands ~12–15% by 2040 as the arid line moves east. Yet area has been flat-to-declining because urban consumption stayed weak. The millet-product retail wave (Slurrp Farm, Soulfull, Tata Sampann) since 2023 has lifted bajra retail prices to ₹80–110/kg, doubling farmgate-to-shelf multiples and creating a real incentive for the Rajasthan smallholder. If urban demand sustains, bajra is the rare crop where climate, nutrition and farmer economics align.