Gurdaspur Police Intensifies Stubble Burning Crackdown with Awareness Drives

Gurdaspur Police have intensified their campaign against stubble burning with regular inspections and awareness drives across villages. SSP Aditya stated that farmers are being educated about environmental and health hazards, with strict legal action promised for violators. The Punjab government has rolled out a ₹500 crore plan with subsidies and satellite monitoring to reduce farm fires by 50%. Despite measures, farmers protest high machinery costs and tight harvest-to-sowing windows.

Key Points: Gurdaspur Police Campaign Against Stubble Burning

  • Awareness campaigns launched across villages
  • One police officer deployed per village
  • Strict legal action warned for violators
  • Punjab aims to cut farm fires by 50% in 2025-26
3 min read

Punjab: Gurdaspur Police intensifies campaign against stubble burning, awareness drives underway

Gurdaspur Police ramps up efforts against stubble burning with village inspections, awareness camps, and legal warnings to farmers.

"We appeal to farmers to adopt scientific methods for stubble management and cooperate with the administration. Strict legal action will be taken against those violating the ban - SSP Aditya"

Gurdaspur, May 10

The Punjab Police administration in Gurdaspur on Sunday intensified efforts to prevent incidents of stubble burning, with teams conducting regular inspections and awareness campaigns across villages in the district.

Officials said administrative and police teams are continuously visiting nearby villages to ensure that no farmer sets crop residue on fire.

Speaking to ANI on the initiative, SSP Aditya said that people are being informed through these camps about the environmental and health hazards caused by stubble burning.

"Gurdaspur Police and the district administration are conducting awareness campaigns across villages to curb stubble burning. Farmers are being educated about the harmful impact of stubble burning on the environment and public health", SSP said.

"We appeal to farmers to adopt scientific methods for stubble management and cooperate with the administration. Strict legal action will be taken against those violating the ban on stubble burning", he added.

According to police authorities, one police officer has been deployed in each village to monitor local activities and encourage farmers not to burn stubble. Special awareness camps are also being organised to educate farmers and residents about the harmful effects of stubble burning.

Officials stated that burning stubble leads to environmental pollution, increases air pollution levels and adversely affects public health.

The police administration has appealed to farmers to adopt alternative stubble management methods and cooperate in protecting the environment.

The Punjab government has rolled out strict measures for the 2025-2026 season to curb stubble burning, aiming to slash farm fires by 50%. The push combines heavy subsidies, tech surveillance, and legal penalties.

Under a ₹500 crore plan, individual farmers get 50% subsidy and farmer groups/cooperatives get 80% subsidy on Crop Residue Management machines.

By late 2025, FIRs were being filed against violators. The state is also making "red entries" in land records of farmers who burn stubble -- a move that blocks them from selling the land or taking loans against it.

Punjab is using satellite data to spot fires in real time. Ground teams with Punjab Pollution Control Board officials are verifying incidents on the ground.

The state is promoting both in-situ management in the field and ex-situ use of stubble. Focus areas include biochar production and increasing paddy straw pellet use in thermal power plants.

Special campaigns and farmer counselling sessions are underway, especially in high-fire districts like Muktsar and Fazilka.

The government is also pushing crop diversification to cut the overall paddy area and reduce stubble load. Despite the measures, the government faces pushback from farmers. Many protest the high cost of machines and the narrow window between paddy harvest and wheat sowing, saying it leaves them little choice.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
It's encouraging to see police playing a proactive role in environmental protection. The satellite monitoring and red entries in land records seem quite stringent. Hope this brings real change this season instead of just token fines. The focus on alternative uses for stubble like biochar is smart too.
K
Kavya N
Satellite spotting and 50% subsidy sounds good on paper but ground reality is different. Mera gaon Gurdaspur me hai - farmers ke paas time nahi hai between paddy and wheat. Machines available hain but queues bahut lambi hoti hain. Government ko combine harvesters with straw management attachments promote karne chahiye.
D
David E
I've read about the Delhi pollution crisis linked to stubble burning. It's positive to see Punjab taking action with real consequences like blocking land sales for violators. But you have to address farmer economics first - if the alternative costs more than the risk of fine, change will be slow. The 80% subsidy for cooperatives seems promising.
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Priya S
I understand environmental concerns but red entries in land records is too harsh! 😱 Farmers already have so many struggles - MSP issues, input costs, now this. Awareness better than punishment. Also, why not give more incentives for diversification to horticulture or pulses? Punjab can grow so much more than just wheat-paddy.
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Rohit P
Finally some concrete action! 🚔 One policeman per village is a serious step. But I hope they also educate instead of just punish. My friend in Muktsar says farmers genuinely want alternatives but need quicker machine availability during the short window. The ₹500

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