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Gujarat News Updated Jun 16, 2026

Gujarat’s Farm Relief Soars to Rs 22,733 Crore in Decade

Gujarat has paid Rs 22,733 crore in agricultural relief to over 1.36 crore farmers from 2015-16 to 2025-26. The 2025-26 financial year recorded the highest single payout of Rs 10,337 crore, accounting for 46% of total relief over the decade. Climate-related losses escalated steadily, with major events including Cyclone Biparjoy in 2023 and repeated unseasonal rains. The state has expanded its disaster-response framework to address increasing weather-related challenges.

Gujarat farm relief outlay climbs to Rs 22,733 crore over decade

Gandhinagar, June 15

The Gujarat government has paid agricultural relief and compensation worth Rs 22,733 crore to more than 1.36 crore farmers affected by floods, unseasonal rain, drought, cyclones and soil erosion over the past decade, with the latest financial year accounting for the largest single payout on record.

According to official year-wise agricultural relief data accessed by IANS, a total of 1,36,28,407 farmers benefited from government compensation and relief packages between 2015-16 and 2025-26, underscoring the increasing economic impact of recurrent floods, droughts, cyclones, unseasonal rainfall and other weather-related calamities on Gujarat's agricultural sector.

The most significant increase came in 2025-26, when compensation reached Rs 10,337 crore for 36,74,065 farmers affected by a series of crop-loss events, including special relief packages for paddy and cotton growers announced following damage reported during October 2024, as well as relief measures covering August-September and October 2025.

The amount accounted for nearly 46 per cent of all agricultural relief disbursed over the entire period covered by the data.

The figures illustrate how climate-related agricultural losses have steadily increased in scale since 2015-16, when 182,041 farmers received Rs 279 crore following heavy rainfall, floods, and unseasonal rains.

Compensation rose sharply to Rs 1,706 crore in 2017-18 after heavy rainfall, flooding and soil erosion affected large parts of the state.

The following year, the government disbursed Rs 1,678 crore to 17,59,614 farmers impacted by both heavy rainfall and drought conditions across 51 and 45 talukas, respectively.

The relief followed one of Gujarat's most challenging monsoon seasons, when dozens of talukas were declared scarcity-hit due to deficient rainfall and special drought packages were announced for affected regions.

In 2019-20, unseasonal rainfall triggered one of the largest agricultural assistance exercises to date.

A total of 33,18,097 farmers received Rs 2,489 crore under the Agricultural Assistance Package-2019, making it the highest beneficiary count recorded in the dataset until that time.

The state's compensation bill climbed further in 2020-21 when heavy rainfall and floods led to payouts of Rs 2,906 crore covering about 19,03,575 farmers under the Agricultural Relief Package-2020.

During 2021-22, Gujarat provided Rs 1,240 crore to 7,67,330 farmers through the Cyclone Agricultural Relief Package-2021 and the Agricultural Relief Package-2021, implemented in two phases.

Relief requirements were temporarily eased in 2022-23, when heavy rainfall-related losses led to compensation of Rs 197 crore to 1,93,771 farmers.

However, extreme weather events again intensified in 2023-24. The state paid Rs 410 crore to 2,55,641 farmers affected by unseasonal rain, heavy rainfall and the impact of Cyclone Biparjoy.

The cyclone struck Gujarat's coast in June 2023, causing extensive damage to crops, orchards and trees, particularly in Kutch and Banaskantha districts.

Government assessments at the time estimated damage across about 1.3 lakh hectares, prompting a dedicated relief package for affected cultivators. The following year saw another substantial rise in compensation.

In 2024-25, the government disbursed Rs 1,491 crore to 8,04,703 farmers affected by a succession of weather-related incidents, including unseasonal rainfall events, heavy monsoon damage, special relief packages and soil erosion during the Kharif season.

The most historic escalation occurred in 2025-26. Compensation jumped more than seven times from the previous year, rising from Rs 1,491 crore to Rs 10,337 crore.

The number of beneficiaries also surged to more than 3.67 lakh farmers, making it the largest agricultural relief exercise recorded in the dataset.

Officials indicated that crop-loss compensation programmes had expanded significantly as weather-related claims increased across districts.

The decade-long figures suggest that Gujarat has significantly strengthened its agricultural disaster-response framework, with relief measures becoming larger and more comprehensive as weather-related challenges have intensified.

By extending compensation to more than 1.36 crore farmers and disbursing Rs 22,733 crore through successive relief packages, the state has sought to cushion cultivators from natural calamities, highlighting the government's emphasis on protecting farm livelihoods during periods of crisis.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Sneha F

Living in Ahmedabad, I often forget how much our farmers face. Reading that 1.36 crore farmers have benefited is heartening, but it also means nearly every farming family in Gujarat has faced some calamity. The 2019 package covering 33 lakh farmers was huge. My uncle is a cotton farmer in Saurashtra and he told me the relief helped during the drought year. We need more crop insurance awareness though!

Michael C

Impressive data from Gujarat. As someone from the US who follows Indian agriculture, these numbers show a clear trend of escalating climate impacts. The jump from Rs 279 crore in 2015-16 to Rs 10,337 crore now is staggering. I hope the state is also putting money into drought-resistant seeds and better irrigation. Compensation alone won't solve the root cause.

Kavya N

The Cyclone Biparjoy relief in 2023-24 was much needed. My cousin in Bhuj lost his mango orchard, and the compensation helped him replant. But I wish the process was faster - some farmers waited months. Also, 1.3 lakh hectares damaged from just one cyclone shows how vulnerable coastal Gujarat is. Government should focus more on cyclone-proof farming techniques.

Rohan X

While the numbers are impressive, I have a concern. The article says 36,74,065 farmers benefited in 2025-26 but it also mentions "3.67 lakh" which is a huge discrepancy. 36 lakh vs 3.67 lakh - someone messed up the math. Such errors make me question the accuracy of the entire dataset. Fact-checking matters! 🤔

V < We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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