Current Trends and Future Prospects in Global Production, Utilization, and Trade of Pearl Millet

Millets are a group of small-seeded annual grasses that occupy the sixth position after rice, wheat, maize, barley, and sorghum globally. Among the millets, pearl millet (Pennisetum glaucum R. Br.) represents approximately 75% of the global millet area. Around 70% of total millet is produced under w...

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Autores principales: Deevi, Kumara Charyulu, Swamikannu, Nedumaran, Gumma, Murali Krishna, Pingali, Parthasarathy Rao
Formato: Capítulo de libro
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Springer 2024
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Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/168802
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author Deevi, Kumara Charyulu
Swamikannu, Nedumaran
Gumma, Murali Krishna
Pingali, Parthasarathy Rao
author_browse Deevi, Kumara Charyulu
Gumma, Murali Krishna
Pingali, Parthasarathy Rao
Swamikannu, Nedumaran
author_facet Deevi, Kumara Charyulu
Swamikannu, Nedumaran
Gumma, Murali Krishna
Pingali, Parthasarathy Rao
author_sort Deevi, Kumara Charyulu
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Millets are a group of small-seeded annual grasses that occupy the sixth position after rice, wheat, maize, barley, and sorghum globally. Among the millets, pearl millet (Pennisetum glaucum R. Br.) represents approximately 75% of the global millet area. Around 70% of total millet is produced under warm tropics dryland climates with Africa and Asia accounting for 98% of the global area and 97% of global production. Among the countries, India is the largest producer followed by China, Niger, and Nigeria. The area under millets has come down globally from 35 to 32 million ha between 2007 and 2019 mainly due to the decline in Asia. Yields, however, increased significantly in Asia from 1100 kg/ha to 1292 kg/ha while it declined marginally in Africa. Globally, nearly 3/4 of the domestic supply of millet is used for food, and the rest is used for feed and other uses. Developed countries mainly use millet for animal feed/bird feed. The nutritive and gluten-free nature of millet has provided ample scope across the globe for developing several nutrition-based products, beverages, and baby foods. The enhanced demand for processed foods augers well for millet though still in a nascent stage. Millets are thinly traded with less than 2% of total millet production being exported. Despite this based on International Food Policy Research Institute’s (IFPRI’s) IMPACT (International Model for Policy analysis of Agricultural Commodities and Trade) model projections, global millet demand is set to increase from 48.5 to 66.5 million tons between 2030 and 2050, and in Asia projected supply would be lower than the demand indicating a widening gap with scope for enhanced trade to meet the shortfall. Since millets are grown under poor soil and marginal environmental conditions, their yields are unstable due to biotic and abiotic stresses besides socio-economic constraints like linkage to markets, access to credit, etc. Addressing these constraints would enhance not only the competitiveness of millets but also the scope for expanding to more favorable areas.
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spelling CGSpace1688022025-01-24T14:11:59Z Current Trends and Future Prospects in Global Production, Utilization, and Trade of Pearl Millet Deevi, Kumara Charyulu Swamikannu, Nedumaran Gumma, Murali Krishna Pingali, Parthasarathy Rao pearl millet hybrids food security nutrition security climate resilience Millets are a group of small-seeded annual grasses that occupy the sixth position after rice, wheat, maize, barley, and sorghum globally. Among the millets, pearl millet (Pennisetum glaucum R. Br.) represents approximately 75% of the global millet area. Around 70% of total millet is produced under warm tropics dryland climates with Africa and Asia accounting for 98% of the global area and 97% of global production. Among the countries, India is the largest producer followed by China, Niger, and Nigeria. The area under millets has come down globally from 35 to 32 million ha between 2007 and 2019 mainly due to the decline in Asia. Yields, however, increased significantly in Asia from 1100 kg/ha to 1292 kg/ha while it declined marginally in Africa. Globally, nearly 3/4 of the domestic supply of millet is used for food, and the rest is used for feed and other uses. Developed countries mainly use millet for animal feed/bird feed. The nutritive and gluten-free nature of millet has provided ample scope across the globe for developing several nutrition-based products, beverages, and baby foods. The enhanced demand for processed foods augers well for millet though still in a nascent stage. Millets are thinly traded with less than 2% of total millet production being exported. Despite this based on International Food Policy Research Institute’s (IFPRI’s) IMPACT (International Model for Policy analysis of Agricultural Commodities and Trade) model projections, global millet demand is set to increase from 48.5 to 66.5 million tons between 2030 and 2050, and in Asia projected supply would be lower than the demand indicating a widening gap with scope for enhanced trade to meet the shortfall. Since millets are grown under poor soil and marginal environmental conditions, their yields are unstable due to biotic and abiotic stresses besides socio-economic constraints like linkage to markets, access to credit, etc. Addressing these constraints would enhance not only the competitiveness of millets but also the scope for expanding to more favorable areas. 2024-12-10 2025-01-09T22:45:00Z 2025-01-09T22:45:00Z Book Chapter https://hdl.handle.net/10568/168802 en Open Access application/pdf Springer Deevi, Kumara Charyulu; Swamikannu, Nedumaran; Pingali, Parthasarathy Rao; Gumma, Murali Krishna. 2024. Current Trends and Future Prospects in Global Production, Utilization, and Trade of Pearl Millet
spellingShingle pearl millet
hybrids
food security
nutrition security
climate resilience
Deevi, Kumara Charyulu
Swamikannu, Nedumaran
Gumma, Murali Krishna
Pingali, Parthasarathy Rao
Current Trends and Future Prospects in Global Production, Utilization, and Trade of Pearl Millet
title Current Trends and Future Prospects in Global Production, Utilization, and Trade of Pearl Millet
title_full Current Trends and Future Prospects in Global Production, Utilization, and Trade of Pearl Millet
title_fullStr Current Trends and Future Prospects in Global Production, Utilization, and Trade of Pearl Millet
title_full_unstemmed Current Trends and Future Prospects in Global Production, Utilization, and Trade of Pearl Millet
title_short Current Trends and Future Prospects in Global Production, Utilization, and Trade of Pearl Millet
title_sort current trends and future prospects in global production utilization and trade of pearl millet
topic pearl millet
hybrids
food security
nutrition security
climate resilience
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/168802
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