Raebareli district
Raebareli district is an administrative district in the central region of Uttar Pradesh, India, with its headquarters in the city of Raebareli, situated approximately 72 kilometres southeast of Lucknow on the Sai River.[1] The district spans 4,609 square kilometres and recorded a population of 3,405,559 in the 2011 census, of which over 90% reside in rural areas, reflecting its agrarian character.[2] [3] Established by the British in 1858, it derives its name from the Bhar community and features a landscape of the Gangetic plain conducive to agriculture, with principal crops including wheat, rice, and pulses.[4] [1] The economy relies heavily on farming and allied activities, supplemented by major industries such as the NTPC Unchahar thermal power plant, the Rail Coach Factory at Lalganj, and the Indian Telephone Industries unit.[4] Notable institutions include the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) Raebareli, operational since 2018, enhancing healthcare infrastructure.[5] Historically, the district played a role in the Indian independence movement, including participation in the Quit India Movement of 1942, marked by widespread protests and suppressions.[4] The Raebareli Lok Sabha constituency, encompassing parts of the district, has been a political stronghold for the Nehru-Gandhi family since 1952, underscoring its electoral significance in national politics.[6]Geography
Topographical features
Raebareli district occupies a portion of the Indo-Gangetic alluvial plain, characterized by gently undulating terrain formed through deposition by rivers including the Ganges and its tributaries. The landscape features subtle variations in relief, with no significant elevations, hills, or escarpments, reflecting the recent geological history of fluvial aggradation in the region.[7][8] Elevations range from a high of 120.4 meters above sea level in the northwest to a low of 86.9 meters in the southeast, creating a gradual southeastern slope that influences local drainage and soil distribution. This topography supports broad, fertile expanses suitable for agriculture, with troughs and crests contributing to minor variations in land capability.[7] The district is segmented into five main topographical units based on drainage divides and alluvial characteristics: the Ganga Khadar (active floodplain along the Ganges), the Southern Clay Tract (depositional lows with heavier soils), the Ganga Upland Plain (elevated interfluves north of the river), the Northern Clay Tract (similar low-lying clays), and the Central Tract (Sai River upland with meandering influences). These divisions arise from historical river courses, paleochannels, and sediment types, with khadar zones exhibiting periodic inundation and uplands offering better drainage.[7]Rivers and floodplains
The Sai River constitutes the principal internal drainage system of Raebareli district, bisecting it into roughly equal halves as it flows southward through the central portion.[9] Originating from a lake near Bijgawan village in Hardoi district to the northwest, the rain-fed Sai traverses approximately 600 kilometers across multiple districts, including Raebareli, before merging with the Gomti River near Jaunpur; within Raebareli, it supports local agriculture through its alluvial deposits but also contributes to seasonal waterlogging.[10] The Ganga River delineates the southeastern boundary of the district, particularly along the Dalmau tehsil, where it marks the interface with neighboring areas and influences the broader hydrological regime as part of the Ganga-Ghaghara basin, with the Sai operating within the subordinate Gomti-Sai sub-basin.[9] Smaller streams, such as the Naiya (including the Simrauta Naiya originating locally), supplement drainage but remain minor compared to the Sai and Ganga.[11] The district's terrain features extensive alluvial floodplains, characteristic of the Indo-Gangetic plain, with younger floodplains directly adjacent to active river channels like the Sai; these low-lying areas, forming terraces at varying elevations, undergo periodic inundation during the monsoon season due to overflow from the Sai and Ganga, depositing fertile silt while posing risks to settlements and crops.[9] Flood hazard assessments classify parts of Raebareli as vulnerable to riverine flooding, with a return period indicating over 1% annual probability of damaging events, exacerbated by the flat topography and heavy monsoon rainfall averaging 1,000-1,200 mm annually in the region.[12] Historical data from flood monitoring records cumulative inundation affecting up to 1,34,376 hectares in severe episodes, underscoring the causal role of upstream runoff and inadequate embankment maintenance in amplifying impacts on rural villages.[13] Mitigation efforts, including embankments along the Sai, have reduced but not eliminated recurrence, as evidenced by district-level disaster reports noting ongoing vulnerabilities to floods alongside droughts and fires.[14]Climate patterns
Raebareli district features a sub-humid climate with distinct seasonal variations, including hot summers from March to early June, followed by a rainy monsoon season, a transitional post-monsoon period, and cooler winters from December to February.[9] Large diurnal and annual temperature fluctuations are common, influenced by its location in the Indo-Gangetic Plain.[9] Annual average precipitation totals approximately 1,150 mm, with the majority—around 85% of Uttar Pradesh's regional average—occurring during the southwest monsoon from June to September.[9] [15] Monsoon onset typically aligns with statewide patterns, as in 2024 when it began on June 25 and withdrew by October 11, though district-specific deficits or excesses vary; eastern Uttar Pradesh, including Raebareli, recorded a 7% monsoon rainfall deficit in 2024 against a normal of 744.3 mm statewide.[16] Dry winters and pre-monsoon periods contribute to aridity, exacerbating agricultural vulnerabilities. Temperatures range from seasonal lows of about 9°C in January to highs exceeding 40°C during May, with extremes rarely dipping below 6°C or surpassing 44°C based on historical observations.[17] Summers often see heatwaves, while winters bring cold waves and fog, with minimums occasionally reaching 3–4°C across Uttar Pradesh.[18] Climate variability manifests in recurrent droughts and floods; Raebareli records among the highest number of severe drought events in Uttar Pradesh per standardized indices like SPI and SPEI, linked to erratic monsoon patterns and El Niño influences.[19] Flood risks arise from intense monsoon downpours and river overflows, alternating with drought spells that strain water resources.[20] Rising temperatures and shifting precipitation, consistent with broader Indo-Gangetic trends, amplify these extremes.Forests and biodiversity
The forest cover in Raebareli district is limited, totaling 53.44 square kilometers, which represents approximately 1.65% of the district's geographical area of 3,232.36 square kilometers. Natural forest extent is minimal, with only 3 hectares recorded in 2020, constituting less than 0.1% of the land area and reflecting extensive agricultural conversion and human settlement pressures in the Gangetic plains. Recent land-use analyses indicate a modest increase in forested area from 0.1% to 0.8% between certain assessment periods, attributed to afforestation efforts amid ongoing deforestation trends.[21][22][23] Biodiversity in the district is concentrated in wetland ecosystems rather than dense woodlands, with the Samaspur Bird Sanctuary serving as the primary protected area spanning 800 hectares in Salon tehsil. Established as a perennial lowland marsh, it supports migratory and resident avian species, including sarus cranes, Siberian cranes, and various waterfowl, alongside aquatic flora such as Phragmites grass and surrounding riparian trees like mango (Mangifera indica), sheesham (Dalbergia sissoo), and mahua (Madhuca longifolia). The sanctuary's wetland vegetation includes emergent macrophytes and submerged aquatics, fostering habitat for amphibians, reptiles, and invertebrates, though mammalian diversity remains low due to habitat fragmentation.[24][25][26] Conservation challenges include encroachment, pollution from agricultural runoff, and seasonal flooding, which impact faunal assemblages; surveys note recovering avifauna diversity in reclaimed sodic lands nearby, with higher bird indices in areas like Saripur. No large-scale tiger reserves or mammalian hotspots exist, emphasizing the district's role in avian and wetland conservation within Uttar Pradesh's broader network. Peer-reviewed studies highlight the need for targeted restoration to preserve endemic plant species amid low overall forest density.[27][28]History
Pre-colonial era
The pre-colonial history of Raebareli district relies heavily on local traditions and sparse medieval references, with limited archaeological corroboration of ancient settlements. Evidence suggests the presence of civilized life in the region from early times, as part of the broader Avadh subah, extending from the Himalayan foothills to the Ganga river.[29] Local accounts credit the Bhars tribe with founding the town, originally named Bharauli or Barauli—later shortened to Bareli—with the prefix "Rae" possibly originating from the nearby village of Rahi or the honorific title "Rae" used by Kayastha chieftains who exerted influence over the area for an extended period.[29] The Bhars, an indigenous ruling group, are depicted as early dominators of the fertile Gangetic plains in this vicinity, maintaining control until the 12th century when incursions by the Delhi Sultanate began eroding their authority.[30][29] By the 13th century, the region fell under the Delhi Sultanate's sway, marking a transition from tribal chiefdoms to centralized Islamic governance, though Bhar remnants and emerging Rajput clans persisted in localized resistance.[31] Specific artifacts or inscriptions from this era remain undocumented in Raebareli, underscoring the reliance on oral histories over empirical records for pre-Sultanate phases.[29] Paleoenvironmental studies, such as pollen analysis from sites like Lashoda Tal, indicate agricultural activity in the central Ganga plains dating to prehistoric periods, but direct links to Raebareli's settlements await further excavation.[32]Mughal and Nawabi periods
During the Mughal period, the territory of present-day Raebareli district formed part of the Awadh region under imperial administration.[33] As Mughal authority extended in the 16th century, local parganas in the area contributed to revenue collection and military levies, reflecting integration into the empire's provincial structure.[34] With the weakening of central Mughal control in the early 18th century, the governors of Awadh, known as Nawabs, transitioned to semi-autonomous rule over the region starting with Saadat Khan in 1722.[31] Raebareli was incorporated into this Nawabi domain, which lasted until British annexation in 1856.[33] Under the Nawabs, the Baiswara region—including Raebareli—was established as a distinct administrative nizamat with its headquarters at Raebareli.[35] During the reign of Asaf-ud-Daula (1775–1797), Raebareli and Salon functioned as key chaklas within this unit, managed amid tensions with local Rajput taluqdars like the Bais clan, who retained significant landholdings and occasionally resisted central directives.[34][36] Economic output in Raebareli during the Nawabi era included substantial production of salt and saltpetre, with annual salt turnover reaching 361,361 maunds, supporting regional trade and imperial demands.[37] Surviving architectural remnants, such as mosques and tombs, attest to Mughal and Nawabi patronage in the district.[38]British colonial administration
Following the annexation of the princely state of Oudh on 7 February 1856 by the British East India Company under Governor-General Lord Dalhousie, citing alleged misgovernment and inefficiency, the territory including Raebareli came under direct British administration.[39] Initially governed as a non-regulation province under a Chief Commissioner, Oudh's administration emphasized rapid revenue assessment and settlement to consolidate control, often exacerbating local tensions through heavy land taxes imposed on taluqdars and zamindars.[40] Raebareli, situated in the Baiswara region with its 18 semi-autonomous Bais taluqdari estates such as Khajurgaon and Shankarpur, experienced disruptions as British forces suppressed local resistance during the Indian Rebellion of 1857, with revolutionaries retreating to areas like Deeh by early 1858.[34][41] The district of Raebareli was formally established as an administrative unit in 1858, named after its headquarters town, to streamline governance in the annexed territories and facilitate revenue collection amid post-rebellion stabilization efforts.[29] Integrated into the United Provinces of Agra and Oudh (later the United Provinces), it fell under the Lucknow Division, with a Collector as the chief executive officer responsible for civil administration, judicial functions, and land revenue oversight.[31] British policies prioritized the taluqdari system, granting proprietary rights to loyal taluqdars via the Oudh Estates Act of 1869 and related measures like the Taluqdars' Succession Act, which protected large estates from partition and fragmentation to ensure fiscal reliability and political allegiance.[42] This approach, while stabilizing elite support, imposed summary settlements that fixed high revenue demands—often exceeding agricultural yields—leading to widespread agrarian distress and indebtedness among ryots (tenant cultivators) by the late 19th century.[43] Administrative records from the period highlight Raebareli's role in Oudh's permanent settlement experiments, where British surveyors mapped parganas and assessed taluqdari holdings, but enforcement relied on coercive measures including police auxiliaries and military detachments to quell defaults.[44] By the early 20th century, the district's bureaucracy expanded to include sub-divisional officers and tehsildars for local revenue and magisterial duties, yet persistent complaints of over-taxation and landlord exploitation prompted sporadic peasant mobilizations, such as the formation of the Kisan Sabha under Baba Ram Chandra in the 1920s, which challenged colonial land policies through non-payment campaigns.[45] These tensions underscored the administration's causal reliance on extractive revenue mechanisms, which prioritized imperial fiscal needs over sustainable local agriculture, contributing to economic stagnation documented in provincial gazetteers.[3]Post-independence developments
Following India's independence on August 15, 1947, Raebareli district, as part of the newly formed Uttar Pradesh state, experienced celebrations marking the end of British rule, with local participation in national rejoicing. The district's administrative structure remained under the tehsils established during colonial times, but underwent territorial adjustments in subsequent decades to align with state reorganization efforts. Early post-independence focus included agrarian reforms, as the Uttar Pradesh Zamindari Abolition and Land Reforms Act of 1950 eliminated intermediary zamindars, conferring ownership rights directly to tillers and reshaping rural landholding patterns in Raebareli, where agriculture dominated the economy. This legislation, implemented progressively through the 1950s, redistributed land and aimed to enhance productivity, though implementation challenges persisted due to compensation disputes and evasion tactics by larger landowners.[29][46] Industrial and infrastructural advancements marked subsequent decades, with the establishment of key public sector units boosting employment and energy supply. The National Thermal Power Corporation (NTPC) Unchahar plant, operational since the 1970s, provided thermal power generation capacity, supporting regional electrification amid initial lacks in power infrastructure noted in the late 1960s. The Rail Coach Factory at Lalganj, set up under government initiatives, contributed to railway manufacturing, while the Indian Telephone Industries unit facilitated telecommunications expansion. These developments, driven by central planning, diversified the district's economy beyond subsistence farming, though agriculture remained central, with paddy, wheat, and pulses as primary crops benefiting modestly from Green Revolution technologies introduced in the 1960s, albeit with limited irrigation penetration compared to western Uttar Pradesh.[4][47] In recent years, healthcare infrastructure advanced with the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) Raebareli, notified in 2013 and becoming operational around 2018 under the Pradhan Mantri Swasthya Suraksha Yojana Phase II, offering specialized medical education and services to address regional gaps. Politically, Raebareli gained prominence as a Congress stronghold post-1952, when Feroze Gandhi secured the Lok Sabha seat, followed by family members including Indira, Sonia, and Rahul Gandhi, influencing local development priorities toward rural electrification, irrigation, and constituency-specific projects despite persistent critiques of uneven progress in basic amenities. These elements reflect a trajectory of gradual modernization tempered by agricultural dependence and infrastructural deficits.[48][49]Administration and politics
Administrative structure
Raebareli district is administratively organized under the Lucknow Division of Uttar Pradesh, with the District Magistrate serving as the chief executive officer responsible for both revenue administration and law enforcement.[50] The district is subdivided into 6 sub-divisions, each headed by a Sub-Divisional Magistrate (SDM) who oversees local governance, revenue collection, and magisterial functions. These sub-divisions, which coincide with the tehsils, are Raebareli, Dalmau, Lalganj, Unchahar, Maharajganj, and Salon.[51] For developmental administration, a separate structure exists under the Chief Development Officer, who coordinates with Block Development Officers across 18 community development blocks. These blocks facilitate rural development programs, including agriculture, infrastructure, and welfare schemes at the grassroots level. The blocks include Amawan, Bachhrawan, Sataon, Dalmau, Harchandpur, Kheeron, Lalganj, Maharajganj, Jagatpur, Rahi, Rohaniya, Sareni, Shivgarh, Unchahar, Salon, Churwa, Deeh, and Silhauri.[52][50] Additional District Magistrates assist the DM in executive and finance/revenue matters, ensuring coordinated implementation of state policies. This tiered structure supports decentralized decision-making while maintaining oversight from the district headquarters in Raebareli city.[50]Electoral districts and representation
The Rae Bareli Lok Sabha constituency encompasses the entirety of Raebareli district and comprises six Vidhan Sabha segments: Bachhrawan (reserved for Scheduled Castes), Harchandpur, Raebareli, Salon, Sareni, and Unchahar.[53] Rahul Gandhi of the Indian National Congress serves as the Member of Parliament for Rae Bareli, having won the seat in the 2024 general election with 687,649 votes (66.17% share), defeating Bharatiya Janata Party candidate Dinesh Pratap Singh, who polled 297,619 votes, by a margin of 390,030 votes.[54][55] The district's Vidhan Sabha constituencies were last contested in the March 2022 Uttar Pradesh Legislative Assembly elections, resulting in representation split primarily between the Samajwadi Party and Bharatiya Janata Party, reflecting the district's competitive electoral landscape where SP secured 38.3% of votes district-wide compared to BJP's 34.6%.[56] Specific outcomes include:| Constituency | Reservation | MLA | Party |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bachhrawan | SC | Shyam Sundar Bharti | SP |
| Harchandpur | General | Rahul Lodhi | SP |
| Raebareli | General | Aditi Singh | BJP |
Political history and dynastic influence
The Rae Bareli Lok Sabha constituency, encompassing much of Raebareli district, has been a consistent stronghold of the Indian National Congress since India's first general election in 1952, with the party securing the seat in 20 out of 24 elections held through 2024.[63] This dominance reflects the district's integration into broader Uttar Pradesh politics, where national family legacies have shaped local electoral outcomes, often prioritizing continuity over competitive alternation. Congress victories spanned 66 of the 72 years from 1952 to 2024, underscoring a pattern of voter loyalty tied to centralized party leadership rather than district-specific policy divergences.[63] Dynastic influence is epitomized by the Nehru-Gandhi family's repeated representation, beginning with Feroze Gandhi, who won the seat in 1952, 1957, and a 1963 by-election following his death in 1960.[63] His wife, Indira Gandhi, succeeded in 1967 and 1971, leveraging her national stature amid rising Congress centralization post-independence.[64] The seat faced interruptions during anti-Congress waves, such as the 1977 loss to Janata Party's Raj Narain amid Emergency backlash, and sporadic defeats in 1989, 1996, 1998, and 1999 to Bharatiya Janata Party or Samajwadi Party candidates, but Congress reclaimed it each time by 2004.[63] Non-family Congress incumbents, like Arun Nehru in 1980 and Sheila Kaul in the 1990s, maintained the hold, yet family ties persisted through endorsements and resource allocation.[65] Sonia Gandhi solidified this legacy from 2004 to 2019, winning four consecutive terms with margins exceeding 100,000 votes in 2009 and 2014, before passing the seat to her son Rahul Gandhi in 2024, who secured victory by 390,030 votes over the Bharatiya Janata Party's Dinesh Singh.[66][54] This succession exemplifies dynastic politics, where family prestige—rooted in Jawaharlal Nehru's national legacy and Indira's premiership—has fostered perceptions of Raebareli as a "safe seat" insulated from broader anti-incumbency trends in Uttar Pradesh.[64] Local assembly segments within the district, such as Raebareli Sadar and Sareni, have mirrored this, with Congress dominating until recent Bharatiya Janata Party gains in 2017 and 2022 state polls, highlighting tensions between familial loyalty and rising regional Hindu nationalist appeals. The Gandhi association has channeled central government projects to the district, including infrastructure investments, reinforcing voter reciprocity but drawing critiques of patronage over merit-based development.[67]Governance challenges and controversies
In 1975, the Allahabad High Court invalidated Prime Minister Indira Gandhi's 1971 Lok Sabha election victory from Raebareli, ruling that she had committed electoral malpractices, including the misuse of government officials and machinery during her campaign against Raj Narain.[68][69] The verdict, delivered on June 12 by Justice Jagmohan Lal Sinha, barred Gandhi from holding office for six years, prompting her to declare a national Emergency on June 25 amid widespread political unrest.[70] Raebareli has faced persistent criticism for underdevelopment despite its status as a long-held parliamentary seat for the Congress party and the Nehru-Gandhi family, with observers attributing governance lapses to dynastic priorities over local needs.[71] Districts like Raebareli exhibit significant urban-rural disparities in human development indicators, including access to healthcare and education, exacerbating poverty and infrastructure deficits.[72] Recent heavy rains in August 2025 exposed acute infrastructural vulnerabilities, with fallen electricity lines, disrupted water supply, and severed connectivity in multiple blocks, underscoring failures in maintenance and planning.[73] Law and order challenges have periodically highlighted administrative shortcomings, as seen in the October 5, 2025, lynching of 38-year-old Dalit laborer Hariom Valmiki in Unchgaon village, where a mob attacked him on suspicion of drone theft amid election-related drone usage.[74][75] Five villagers were arrested, but the incident drew accusations of systemic failures in preventing mob violence and protecting marginalized communities under the state government, with Congress leaders demanding Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath's resignation and a special investigation team probe.[76] Rahul Gandhi, the incumbent MP, condoled the family and visited them, framing the event as a broader lapse in justice delivery.[77] Tensions in administrative coordination surfaced in a September 2025 District Development Coordination and Monitoring Committee (DISHA) meeting, where Rahul Gandhi clashed with Uttar Pradesh Minister Dinesh Pratap Singh over the implementation and monitoring of central schemes, reflecting partisan friction in local governance forums.[78][79] Such episodes underscore challenges in depoliticizing development oversight in a district marked by entrenched family political legacies.[80]Demographics
Population composition
As of the 2011 census, Raebareli district had a total population of 3,405,559, marking an increase of 18.56% from the 2,903,507 recorded in the 2001 census. The population density stood at 739 persons per square kilometer across the district's area of 4,609 square kilometers. Of this population, approximately 9.70% resided in urban areas, with the remainder—over 90%—in rural settings, reflecting the district's agrarian character. The sex ratio was 943 females per 1,000 males, higher than Uttar Pradesh's state average of 912 but indicative of persistent gender imbalances common in the region. The child sex ratio (ages 0-6) was lower at 899 females per 1,000 males.[81] Literacy rates were 67.25% overall, with males at 77.63% and females at 56.29%, showing a significant gender gap and lower female literacy compared to the national average. Scheduled Castes constituted 30.58% of the population, while Scheduled Tribes were minimal at around 0.05%. These figures underscore a demography dominated by rural Hindu communities with substantial lower-caste representation, though detailed breakdowns by religion and caste are addressed separately. No comprehensive census has been conducted since 2011 due to delays, leaving these as the most recent official metrics.Linguistic distribution
In Raebareli district, Hindi serves as the predominant language, with the Awadhi dialect widely used in everyday communication as the local vernacular of the Awadh region. According to aggregated data from the 2011 Census of India, Hindi (including related dialects) accounts for approximately 98.31% of mother tongues reported by the population.[2] Urdu ranks as the primary minority language, spoken by about 1.60% of residents, primarily within Muslim communities. Negligible shares include Punjabi at 0.03%, with other tongues comprising the remainder. Awadhi, while often subsumed under the broader Hindi category in census groupings due to linguistic overlap, remains the characteristic spoken form across rural and urban areas alike.[2][82]Religious and caste demographics
According to the 2011 Census of India, Hindus form the majority religious group in Raebareli district, comprising 87.39% of the total population of 3,405,559. Muslims account for 12.13%, reflecting a notable minority presence concentrated in certain tehsils and urban areas. Other religious communities, including Christians (0.10%), Sikhs (0.05%), Buddhists (0.02%), and Jains (0.01%), together constitute less than 0.5%, with no significant indigenous tribal religious practices reported.[83][2]| Religion | Population | Percentage |
|---|---|---|
| Hindu | 2,975,998 | 87.39% |
| Muslim | 412,944 | 12.13% |
| Christian | 3,509 | 0.10% |
| Sikh | 1,803 | 0.05% |
| Buddhist | 722 | 0.02% |
| Jain | 397 | 0.01% |
| Other religions | 602 | 0.02% |
| Not stated | 8,584 | 0.25% |
Economy
Agricultural sector
Agriculture forms the backbone of Raebareli district's economy, employing the majority of the population and contributing significantly to local income. The district's net cultivated area is approximately 292,000 hectares, representing a substantial portion of the total geographical area of 456,000 hectares, though waste lands account for 12.57% of the land. Cropping intensity averages 151.6% to 163%, reflecting multiple cropping cycles per year. Recent data indicate a total cropped area of 348,931 hectares in 2022-2023.[85][86][2] Major kharif crops include paddy, sorghum, urad bean, pigeon pea, groundnut, and sesamum, while rabi crops consist primarily of wheat, gram, toria, and mustard; zaid crops such as sunflower, urd, and moong are grown on a limited scale. Sugarcane and potato are significant throughout the year. As of 2011-12 data, paddy occupied 85,600 hectares and wheat 131,500 hectares under kharif and rabi seasons, respectively, underscoring their dominance. Soil types vary, with deep loamy (40%) and silty (60%) soils prevalent, alongside sodic soils that pose challenges for cultivation without amendments; alluvial variants from the Ganga and Sai river systems cover much of the arable land.[85][87][87] Irrigation covers 168,000 hectares of net sown area, sourced mainly from canals (45.5% of gross irrigated area) and bore/tube wells (54.4%), with minimal contribution from tanks. The gross irrigated area was 243,200 hectares as of 2011-12. Annual rainfall averages 923 mm, supporting rainfed cultivation in upland areas.[85][87] Production trends show declines in net sown area from 271,836 hectares in 2004-05 to 224,535 hectares in 2014-15, with corresponding reductions in harvested areas for most crops except sesamum. Yields have improved for wheat (up 37%) and potato (up 33%) over 1997-2018, though others like pigeon pea declined sharply. Average productivity includes 2,564 kg/ha for wheat and 2,196 kg/ha for rice (last five years to 2011-12). Raebareli ranked among Uttar Pradesh's top districts for crop growth in 2023-24 and saw a 24.7% increase in sugarcane production in a recent reporting period.[86][87][88][89]| Major Crop | Area ('000 ha, 2011-12) | Average Production ('000 tonnes) | Productivity (kg/ha) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Paddy | 85.6 | 253.7 | 2,196 |
| Wheat | 131.5 | 424.4 | 2,564 |
| Potato | 4.2 | 73.1 | 14,800 |