Despite a bumper harvest, cauliflower farmers in Manikganj district are facing significant financial losses this season due to a supply glut.
While cauliflower prices remain high in other parts of the country, including Dhaka, farmers in Manikganj are struggling to recover production costs. Wholesale buyers are unwilling to pay previous rates because of the abundance in supply, which drags prices down.
Farmers report that the production cost for each cauliflower exceeds Tk 10 but they are now forced to sell them for only Tk 2 to Tk 3 per piece.
Agriculture officers attribute the crisis to unexpected rainfall, which has caused a surplus in production compared to market demand.
They believe proper storage facilities could have helped mitigate the losses, as they would be able to regulate the supply in line with demand.
Many farmers expanded cauliflower cultivation this year, encouraged by good profits in previous seasons. Early winter cauliflower fetched prices as high as Tk 30 to Tk 40 per piece, but prices have now plummeted to Tk 2 to Tk 3, leaving growers to bear substantial financial losses.
Farmers explain that cultivating one bigha of land costs approximately Tk 30,000 to Tk 35,000.
This includes expenses for seedlings (Tk 12,000), plowing (Tk 3,000), daily labor (Tk 1,200), fertilizers and pesticides (Tk 5,000), and annual land leases (Tk 20,000). The current prices mean they are incurring huge losses.
Farmers share their plight
Bashir Ahmed, a farmer of Airamara village in Saturia upazila, said he earned good profits from cauliflower cultivation last year. Encouraged, he planted cauliflower on 18 bighas of land this year. While he earned around Tk 15 lakh from early-harvested cauliflower from 10 bighas, the crop on the remaining 8 bighas is rotting in the fields due to lack of buyers. "Some of the cauliflowers are being fed to cattle," he lamented.
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Abdur Rashid, a farmer of Dhakuli village in Sadar upazila, cultivated cauliflower on 50 bighas of land this year. "I spent Tk 30,000 to Tk 35,000 per bigha, but I am now forced to sell each cauliflower for just Tk 2 to Tk 3," he said, estimating losses of Tk 30 to Tk 35 lakh.
Nakim Uddin Bepari of Meghshimul village said, “The cauliflowers on my two bighas of land are ready for sale, but I cannot afford the labor and transportation costs as they exceed the selling price.