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    “Bihar would have a bumper Rabi crop this year.” This  prediction came from the NASA (National Aeronautics and Space Administration)MODIS   ( Moderate Resolution Imaging  Spectroradiometer) images released  early this week. This is much in contrast to the  Bihar Economic Survey predicting a sharp fall  in the food grains production in the state this year. 
    
    
    
    
  With  the harvest in the spring of 2008, the country’s
    rice and corn production were set to reach record
    levels, said the US Department of Agriculture’s
    Foreign Agricultural Service. This image shows vegetation conditions as observed by the MODIS on NASAâ's   Terra satellite between March 21 and April 5, 2008, compared to average   conditions observed during the same period from 2000 through 2007. Spots of green
    faint colour show the Indian states of West Bengal and
    Bihar, two of the areas where rice and corn  crops were
    thriving. West Bengal was wrapping up its  second crop
    of rice (the rabi, or spring-harvested rice) when the
    data used to make this image were acquired. The Bihar  image can also be interpreted for the cultivation of major rabi crops like  wheat and pulses.  A strip of
    green runs from the Bay of Bengal in the south  to the
    gray, cloud-covered area in the north, indicating that
    plants were lusher than average. The light brown areas
    elsewhere in the state point to regions where plants
    were not growing as much as they normally do at the
    end of March. The bumper crop of rice followed in the
    wake of above-average monsoon rains during the
    June-September monsoon. At the end of the winter
    harvest, India had produced 81.5 million tons of rice,
    a million tons more than the 2006-2007 harvest, and by
    the end of April, production was expected to reach 94
    million tons, said the Foreign Agricultural Service.
    To the west of West Bengal, Bihar was  preparing for a
    record crop of corn, known as maize here. 
 Rivers running from the Himalaya Mountains into the
    Ganges bring water and fertile soil to the
    agricultural state. In Bihar and other corn-growing
    areas throughout India,  good weather conditions
    sustained a healthy crop that the USDA predicted would
    yield a record 16.8 million tons of corn. The section
    of Bihar that is north of the Ganges   River is flushed
    green in this image, a reflection of the good growing
    conditions, view a high-resolution image.
 
 Whatever be the NASA’s projection of foodgrains, the
    figure of the Economic Survey of 2007-08 says “While rice production has fallen by 24.4 percent in
    comparison to the previous year's. The production of wheat
    has fallen by about 19 percent. It is maize (known as
    corn in the United States),  which has suffered the
    most significant fall, with its production falling by
    almost 47 percent over the previous year.”
 
 Thus the overall fall in the agriculture production
    was 26.04 per cent in the year 2007-08. There are
    three crops of maize in Bihar, but it is  essentially a
    Kharif crop and harvested in the early winter.
 
 Reports from different parts of Bihar also  confirm
    that the state has bumper Rabi crop notwithstanding
    early April rain. The NASA image also suggests that it
    is now easily possible to detect the food grains
    production anywhere in the world.
 
    
    
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