Onion Farmers Dump Produce on Roads in Madhya Pradesh as Prices Crash to ₹1 per Kilo
Onion farmers in Madhya Pradesh dumped their produce on the road after prices fell to just ₹1 per kilo, sparking a protest over severe financial losses. The farmers demanded fair pricing and government support as crashing market rates failed to cover production costs, exposing deeper instability in agricultural markets.
According to protesting farmers, the sudden price crash has pushed them deeper into financial distress, wiping out earnings from months of labor. They argue that the current rates fail to cover expenses on seeds, fertilizers, transportation, and storage, intensifying an already fragile economic situation in rural areas. Several growers said they had “no option left” but to discard their produce in the open as the market value had fallen below the cost of harvesting.
Farmers have urged the government to intervene immediately by ensuring fair procurement prices and providing a reliable support mechanism to stabilize the market. Their appeal includes demands for a viable minimum support price (MSP) to protect them from steep and unpredictable drops in wholesale rates. They stressed that without timely action, recurring price shocks could discourage cultivation and erode the region’s agricultural backbone.
The protest highlights the growing volatility of essential commodity markets and the urgent need for consistent, farmer-centred policies. As the state faces pressure to address the crisis, the incident has reignited a wider debate over agricultural pricing systems and the economic vulnerabilities of small-scale producers across India.

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