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12/09/2019

Agriculture
Ramjee Nagarajan
NH Goel World School, Raipur

Introduction
 Primary activity, which produces most of the food that we
consume. The word “agriculture” is derived from the Latin
words ager—meaning field—and cultura—meaning to
grow: Growing crops on the field!
 An art of cultivation of soil, raising crops & rearing poultry
and livestock
 India is an agriculturally important country.
 Largest sector producing around 28 % of the GDP,
 Largest employer providing more than 60 % of the jobs
 Besides food, it produces raw material for industries
 Name some
 Some agricultural products like tea, coffee, spices, etc.
are also exported

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• What is agriculture?
• Why is agriculture considered
important in India?
• Name three crops that serves as raw
material for industries?

Agriculture over the years…


 An age-old economic activity
 Methods have changed
 Depending upon
 the physical environment: Topography of soil &
Climate
 technological know-how and
 socio-cultural practices
 Humans have been hunter-gatherers, with a more
nomadic lifestyle, moving in tune with the
changing seasons, and cattle migration patterns
 Today, we use technologies, but it hasn’t entirely
abandoned early advancements.

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• How have the practices of sourcing


food changed among humans?
• Name the factors influencing the
changes in agriculture?

Primitive Subsistence Farming


 It involves clearing a plot of land by felling trees, burning the
felled trees, mixing the ashes with soil, and then growing crops
 After the soil loses its fertility, the land is abandoned and the
cultivator moves on to a new plot.
 Practised on small patches of land with the help of primitive
tools like hoe, dao and digging sticks, and family/ community
labour.
 Depends upon monsoon, soil’s natural fertility and other
environmental conditions
 Crops like maize, yam, potatoes and cassava are grown on Practised in few
the cleared land. pockets of North East

 Aka., slash-and-burn cultivation

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Advantages & Disadvantages of Jhum


 Known by different names in different parts of the country—
Jhum cultivation in NE
 Eliminate weeds, insects and other germs affecting the soil
 Allows the Nature to replenish, soil fertility by natural
processes
 Allows for farming in areas with dense vegetation, low soil
nutrients content, uncontrollable pests
 Trees in the forests are cut
 When soil fertility decreases, farmers shift & clear a fresh
patch
 Productivity is low
 Decreases soil infertility and leads to soil erosion

Shifting Agriculture Across the Globe


 ‘Milpa’ in Mexico and Central America,
 ‘Conuco’ in Venzuela
 ‘Roca’ in Brazil
 ‘Masole’ in Central Africa
 ‘Ladang’ in Indonesia
 ‘Ray’ in Vietnam

 ‘Bewar’ or ‘Dahiya’ in Madhya Pradesh,  ‘Valre’/ ‘Waltre’ in SE Rajasthan


 ‘Podu’ or ‘Penda’ in Andhra Pradesh,  ‘Khil’ in the Himalayan belt
 ‘Pama Dabi’/ ‘Koman’/ Bringa’ in Orissa,  ‘Kuruwa’ in Jharkhand, and
 ‘Kumari’ in Western Ghats  ‘Jhumming’ in the NE & Andaman

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• What is Primitive Subsistence Farming?


• What are the steps involved in Primitive Subsistence
Farming?
• What are the advantages and disadvantages of
Subsistence Farming?
• Where is Subsistence Farming practiced in India?
• What are the other names of Subsistence Farming?

Assam Scenario
 Rinjha lived with her family in a small village at
the outskirts of Diphu in Assam. She enjoys
watching her family members clearing,
slashing and burning a patch of land for
cultivation. She often helps them in irrigating
the fields with water running through a
bamboo canal from the nearby spring. She
loves the surroundings and wants to stay here
as long as she can, but this little girl has no
idea about the declining fertility of the soil and
her family’s search for fresh a patch of land in
the next season.

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Intensive Subsistence Agriculture


 Farming practised in places of high population
pressure on land
 It is labour-intensive farming
 High doses of biochemical inputs & irrigation are used
 Can you name some of the states of India where such
farming is practised?
 ‘Right of inheritance’ leading to the division of land
among successive generations has left land-holding
size uneconomical
 Farmers continue to take maximum output from the
limited land in the absence of alternative source of
livelihood.
 There is enormous pressure on agricultural land
 Food Crops are generally grown through this method

• What is Intensive Subsistence Farming?


• Where is it practiced in India?
• What are the advantages and disadvantages
of Intensive Subsistence Farming?

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Commercial Farming

 Use of higher doses of modern inputs in


order to obtain higher productivity
 HYV seeds
 Chemical Fertilizers, Insecticides & Pesticides
 Degree of commercialisation of
agriculture varies from one region to
another
 Rice is a commercial crop in Haryana and Punjab
 In Orissa, it is a subsistence crop!

• What are the characteristics of commercial


Farming?
• Where is it practiced in India?
• How does it vary among places within the country?

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Plantation Agriculture

 A single crop is grown on a large area


 Has an interface of agriculture and industry
 Cover large tracts of land, using capital intensive inputs, with
the help of migrant labourers
 Produce is used as raw material in respective industries
 Tea, coffee, rubber, sugarcane, banana, etc..
 Tea in Assam and North Bengal
 Coffee in Karnataka
 As the production is mainly for market, a well-developed
network of transport and communication connecting the
plantation areas, processing industries and markets plays an
important role in the development of plantations.

• What is plantation Agriculture?


• Where is it practiced in India?

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Cropping Pattern

 Our country has a wide range physical diversities and


plurality reflected in agricultural practices and cropping
patterns
 Various types of food and fibre crops, vegetables and
fruits, spices and condiments, etc.. constitute some of
the important crops grown
 India has three cropping seasons — rabi, kharif and zaid.

Rabi Cropping Season


 Sown in winter from Oct – Dec and harvested from Apri- Jun

 Wheat, barley, peas, gram & mustard are common rabi crops

 Grown in the north and northwestern parts of India; viz., such


as Punjab, Haryana, HP, J &K, Uttaranchal and UP are
important for the production of wheat and other rabi crops

 Western Disturbance helps in the success of these crops.

 Success of the green revolution in Punjab, Haryana, western


Uttar Pradesh and parts of Rajasthan has also been an
important factor in the growth of the abovementioned rabi
crops.

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• What is Rabi Cropping Seasom?


• What Crops are grown during the rabi
season
• Which states in India practice Rabi
croping

Kharif Cropping Season


1. Crops are grown with the onset of monsoon and
harvested in Sept-Oct
2. Paddy, maize, jowar, bajra, tur (arhar), moong, urad,
cotton, jute, groundnut & soyabean are Important
Kharif crops
3. Important rice-growing regions are Assam, West
Bengal, coastal regions of Orissa, Andhra Pradesh,
Tamil Nadu, Kerala and Maharashtra, particularly the
(Konkan coast) along with Uttar Pradesh and Bihar.
4. Also in Punjab and Haryana
5. Where water is available in plenty like Assam, West
Bengal and Orissa, three crops of paddy are grown in
a year. They are called as Aus, Aman and Boro!

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• What is Kharif Cropping Seasom?


• What Crops are grown during the
Kharif season
• Which states in India practice Kharif
croping

Zaid Cropping Season

 The Zaid is the cropping season In between the rabi and the kharif
seasons; it’s the short season during the summer months.
 Some of the crops produced during ‘zaid’ are watermelon,
muskmelon, cucumber, vegetables and fodder crops. Sugarcane
takes almost a year to grow

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Major Crops: Rice

 Rice is the staple food crop in India.


 2nd largest producer of rice in the world after China
 A kharif crop
 requires high temperature (above 25°C)
 High humidity
 Annual rainfall above 100 cm
 Grown in the plains of north and north-eastern India, coastal
areas and the deltaic regions
 With the help of canal irrigation and tubewells growing ricehas
become possible in Punjab, Haryana and western Uttar
Pradesh and parts of even Rajasthan!

Major Crops: Wheat

 Second most important cereal crop.


 Principal food crop, in north and north-western part of
the country.
 A rabi crop requires a cool growing season and a
bright sunshine at the time of ripening.
 Requires 50 to 75 cm of annual rainfall evenly
distributed over the growing season.
 Two wheat-growing zones in India
 the Ganga-Satluj plains in the northwest and
 black soil region of the Deccan.
 The major wheat-producing states are Punjab,
Haryana, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Rajasthan and parts of
Madhya Pradesh.

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Major Crops: Millets

 Known as coarse grains: Jowar, bajra and ragi


 Have very high nutritional value
 Jowar:
 In area, 3rd important food crop
Rain-fed crop, grown in the moist areas which
hardly needs irrigation. Maharashtra is the
largest producer of jowar followed by Ragi
Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh and Madhya Ragi is very rich in iron, calcium, other
Pradesh. micro nutrients and roughage
 Bajra: A crop growing well on red, black, sandy,
loamy and shallow black soils.
 Grows well on sandy soils and shallow black soil Karnataka is the largest producer,
 Rajasthan is the largest producer, followed by followed by Tamil Nadu. Himachal
Uttar Pradesh, Maharashtra, Gujarat and Pradesh, Uttaranchal, Sikkim, Jharkhand
Haryana. and Arunachal Pradesh are also
important for the production of ragi.

Major Crops: Maize

 Crop which is used both as food and fodder. It is a


kharif crop which requires temperature between
21°C to 27°C
 Grows well in old alluvial soil.
 States like Bihar maize is grown in rabi season also.
 Use of modern inputs such as HYV seeds, fertilisers
and irrigation have contributed to the increasing
production of maize.
 Major maize-producing states are Karnataka,
Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Andhra Pradesh and Madhya
Pradesh.

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Pulses
 India is the largest producer & consumer of pulses in the
world. Grown in all three seasons.
 Major source of protein in a vegetarian diet
 Tur (arhar), urad, moong, masur, peas and gram are the
major pulses grown in India.
 i. Kharif :Arhar (Tur), Urd (Blackgram), Moong (Greengram),
Lobia (Cowpea), Kulthi (Horsegram);
 ii. Rabi :Gram, Lentil, Pea, Lathyrus (Kesari Dal)& Rajmas;
 iii. Summer :Greengram, Blackgram and Cowpea.
 Pulses need less moisture & can survive in dry conditions.
 Except arhar all pulses help in restoring soil fertility--by
fixing nitrogen from the air—leguminous crops,
 Mostly grown in rotation with other crops. Major pulse producing
states in India are MP, UP, Rajasthan, Maharashtra and Karnataka.

 Which of these pulses are grown in


the kharif and Rabi season?
 Name the pulse which does not help
in restoring soil fertility?

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Oil Seeds
 India is the largest producer of oilseeds in the world.
 Grown in 12 % of the total cropped area
 Main oil-seeds are groundnut, mustard, coconut, sesamum
(til), soyabean, castor seeds, cotton seeds, linseed & sunflower
 Most are edible and used as cooking mediums
 Some of these are also used as raw material in the production
of soap, cosmetics and ointments
 Groundnut is a kharif crop & accounts for 50% of oilseeds
produced in the country. Andhra Pradesh, followed by TN,
Karnataka, Gujarat & Maharashtra
 Linseed and mustard are rabi crops.
 Sesamum is a kharif crop in north & rabi in south India.
 Castor seed is grown both as rabi and kharif crop.

Food Crops other than Grains: Sugarcane


 It is a tropical as well as a subtropical crop.
 Grows well in hot and humid climate
 Ideal temperature of 21°C to 27°C
 Annual rainfall between 75 - 100cm.
 Irrigation is required in the regions of low rainfall.
 Can be grown on a variety of soils and needs manual labour
from sowing to harvesting.
 India is the second largest producer of sugarcane only after
Brazil
 Main source of sugar, gur (jaggary), khandsari and molasses.
 Major sugarcane-producing states are Uttar Pradesh,
Maharashtra, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, Bihar,
Punjab and Haryana.

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Tea
 An example of plantation agriculture
 Important beverage crop introduced in India by the British
 Grows well in tropical and sub-tropical climates with deep and fertile well-drained soil, rich
in humus and organic matter
 Requires warm and moist frost-free climate all through the year
 Showers evenly distributed over the year helps in the growth of tender leaves.
 Is a labour intensive industry. Requires abundant, cheap and skilled labour.
 Processed within the tea garden to restore its freshness.
 Major tea producing states are Assam, hills of Darjeeling and Jalpaiguri districts, West
Bengal, Tamil Nadu and Kerala.
 Apart from these, HP, Uttaranchal, Meghalaya, Andhra Pradesh and Tripura are also tea-
producing states in the country
 India is the leading producer as well as exporter of tea in the world.

Coffee

 India produces 4% of the world’s coffee


 Indian coffee is known in the world for its
good quality.
 Coffeea arabica variety brought from
Yemen is grown in India
 Has a great demand all over the world
 Intially introduced in the Coorg, Baba
Budan Hills
 Even today its cultivation is confined to the
Nilgiri in Karnataka, Kerala and Tamil Nadu.

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Fruits and Vegetables


 India is a producer of tropical as well as temperate fruits.
 Mangoes of Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh and
West Bengal
 Oranges of Nagpur and Cherrapunjee (Meghalaya)
 Bananas of Kerala, Mizoram, Maharashtra and Tamil Nadu,
 Lichi and Guava of Uttar Pradesh and Bihar,
 Pineapples of Meghalaya,
 Grapes of Andhra Pradesh and Maharashtra
 Apples, pears, apricots and walnuts of Jammu and Kashmir
and Himachal Pradesh are in great demand the world over.
 India produces about 13 per cent of the world’s vegetables.
 Important producer of pea, cauliflower, onion, cabbage,
tomato, brinjal and potato.

Non-Food Crops: Rubber

 An equatorial crop
 Under special conditions, it is also grown in tropical
and sub-tropical areas
 Requires moist and humid climate with rainfall of more
than 200 cm. and temperature above 25°C
 Rubber is an important industrial raw material
 Mainly grown in Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Karnataka and
Andaman and Nicobar islands and Garo hills of
Meghalaya.
 India ranks fifth among the world’s natural rubber
producers

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Fibre Crops:

 Four major fibre crops grown in India


 Cotton
 Jute
 Hemp
 Natural silk
 The first three are derived from the crops grown in
the soil
 The Silk is obtained from cocoons of the silkworms
fed on green leaves specially mulberry
 Rearing of silk worms for the production of silk fibre
is known as sericulture

Cotton

 India is native for the cotton plant

 Cotton is the main raw material for cotton textile industry

 India is the third-largest producer (NOW, No 1) in the world

 Grows well in drier parts with black cotton soil of Deccan plateau

 Requires high temperature, (210 frost-free days) and bright


sunshine for its growth light rainfall or irrigation

 A kharif crop and requires 6 to 8 months to mature

 Major cotton-producing states are – Maharashtra, Gujarat, MP,


Karnataka, AP, TN, Punjab, Haryana and UP.

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Jute
 Known as the golden fibre
 Grows well on well-drained fertile soils in the
flood plains where soils are renewed every
year
 High temperature is required during the time
of growth
 West Bengal, Bihar, Assam, Orissa and
Meghalaya are the major jute producing
states
 Used in making gunny bags, mats, ropes,
yarn, carpets and other artefacts.
 Due to its high cost, it is losing market to
synthetic fibres and packing materials,
particularly the nylon.

Technological and Institutional Reforms


 Lack of technological changes have hindered agricultural
development in India.
 Even today, several farmers are dependent upon monsoon and
natural fertility
 As population grows this poses a serious challenge
 Urgent needs for technical and institutional reforms
 ‘Land reform’ was the main focus of our First Five Year Plan.
 Collectivisation, consolidation of holdings, cooperation and
abolition of zamindari, etc., were given priority to bring
institutional reforms after Independence.
 The right of inheritance, lead to fragmentation of land holdings
 Necessitated consolidation of holdings
 The GOI initiated in 60s and 70s the Green and White Revolutions
(Operation Flood) as strategies to improve Indian agriculture.
 This however concentrated the development in few selected
areas

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Governmental Reforms
 In the 1980s and 1990s, a comprehensive land development
programme was initiated
 Provision of the following were some important steps in bring
institutional reforms:
 crop insurance against drought, flood, cyclone, fire and
disease,
 establishment of banks for providing loans to farmers at lower
rates of interest—Grameen banks, cooperative societies and
Nationalised banks
 Kissan Credit Card (KCC)
 Personal Accident Insurance Scheme (PAIS)
 Special weather bulletins and agricultural programmes for
farmers were introduced on the radio and television
 Announcement of minimum support price,
Remunerative(Sugar) and procurement(grains) prices for
important crops to check the exploitation of farmers by
speculators and middlemen

Bhoodan – Gramdan
 Vinoba Bhave was Gandhi’s spiritual heir;
 After Gandhiji’s death, Vinobhaji undertook padyatra to spread
Gandhi’s gram swarajya message to the country
 While lecturing at Pochampalli in Andhra Pradesh, poor landless
farmers demanded land for their economic well-being
 Vinoba Ji assured them to talk to the Govt of India
 Shri Ram Chandra Reddy a rich land lord stood up and offered
80 acres of land to be distributed among 80 land-less villagers.
This act was known as ‘Bhoodan’.
 This encouraged some zamindars, to distribute some of their land
to the landless—known as Gramdan
 Many land-owners chose to provide some part of their land to
the poor farmers due to the fear of land ceiling act.
 Bhoodan-Gramdan movement initiated by Vinobha Bhave is
also known as the Blood-less Revolution

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Contribution of Agriculture
 Agriculture has been the backbone of the Indian
economy
 Its share in the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is
declining from 1951
 Provides employment and livelihood to over 63 % of
the population
 Decline in agriculture will have wide implications for
society
 Government of India is slowly modernising agriculture
 Has established institutes like Indian Council of
Agricultural Research (ICAR), Agricultural Universities,
Veterinary Services and Animal Breeding Centres,
Horticulture Development, R&D in meteorology and
weather forecast, etc.
 Lots of efforts are on to improve the rural infrastructure

Moving out of Agriculture


 The GDP of the country increasing very slowly
 Agriculture’s share is showing a decreasing trend
 Farmers face the challenge from international
competition
 Govt is reducing its investment in agriculture
sector particularly in irrigation, power, rural roads,
market & mechanisation
 Fertiliser subsidy is decreased increasing the
production cost
 Reduction in import duties on agricultural products
 Farmers are withdrawing their investment from
agriculture causing a downfall in the employment
in agriculture

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Food Security
 Food is a basic need & every citizen should have access to
food
 Populations who do not have this access, suffers from lack of
food security
 People without food security is large in some regions of our
country
 Economically less developed states have a higher share.
 Remote areas are more prone to disasters and uncertain food
supply
 To change this scenario, government has carefully designed a
national food security system with two components
 buffer stock and
 public distribution system (PDS).

Public Distribution System (PDS)


 PDS provides food grains and other commodities at subsidised prices
 Primary objective of food security policy is to ensure availability of food to all, at an affordable price
 PDS enabled the poor to have access to food.
 Policy focuses on:
 growth in agricultural production
 fixing the support price for buying wheat and rice
 to maintain the stocks of grains

 FCI is responsible for procuring and stocking grains, while distribution is ensured by PDS
 FCI procures foodgrains at the government announced minimum support price (MSP)
 Govt provides subsidies for agriculture like fertilizers, power and water.
 Subsidies today are unsustainable and made the use of fertilizers, power & water inefficiencient
 Over use of fertilizers & water has led to waterlogging, salinity & depletion of micronutrients
 High MSP, and committed FCI purchases have distorted the cropping pattern
 Wheat & paddy crops are being grown more for the MSP
 Punjab & Haryana are good examples. Also created a serious imbalance in inter-crop parities

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Issues in Agriculture… 1
 Consumers in India are divided into two categories :
1. Below Poverty Line (BPL) and 2. Above Poverty Line
(APL)
 Some of the so called APL slip back to BPL
 With proper agricultural infrastructure, credit linkages & the
use of latest techniques, each district and block can be
made self sufficient in food grain production
 Apart from rice & wheat, foodcrops with better growth
potential can be encouraged
 Providing irrigation facilities, electricity, etc. may also
attract private participation
 Free trade in grains will create massive employment and
reduce poverty in rural areas

Issues in Agriculture… 2
 A gradual shift from cultivation of food crops to cultivation
of fruits, vegetables, oil-seeds and industrial crops has
reduced the net sown area under cereals and pulses
 With a growing population, any decline in food production
puts the country’s food security in question
 Pressure on land for non-agricultural uses like housing, etc.,
has reduced the net sown area
 Productivity of land is showing a declining trend.
 Fertilisers, pesticides and insecticides, which once showed
dramatic results, are now being held responsible for
degrading the soils
 Scarcity of water has led to reduction in area under
irrigation
 Inefficient water management has led to water logging
and salinity.

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Issues in Agriculture… 3
 One important reason is land degradation
 Free power has encouraged pumping of groundwater and
growing water-intensive crops in low-rainfall areas (rice in Punjab,
sugarcane in Maharashtra)
 Reduced groundwater storage in aquifers: leaving wells dry,
pushing the marginal & small farmers out of cultivation
 Rich farmers with deeper tubewells still have water, but many
others face a water crisis
 Inadequate storage and marketing facilities also act as a
disincentive to the farmer.
 Farmers are thus badly affected by the uncertainties of
production and market
 Farmers suffer from a double disadvantage
 pay high prices for inputs such as HYV seeds, fertilisers etc.
 lack the bargaining power to fix prices in their favour

Impact of Globalisation
 Globalisation is not a new… been there since colonisation
 In the 19 century when Europeans came to India, for spices.
Farmers of south India were encouraged to grow Spices. Even
today it is an important export item
 Cotton belts of India attracted the British, exported cotton to
Britain as a raw material for their textile industries.
 Textile industries in Manchester & Liverpool flourished due to good
cotton from India
 Champaran movement in 1917 in Bihar,--farmers were forced to
grow indigo, necessary for the textile industries in Britain
 Farmers were prevented from growing foodgrains to sustain
 Globalisation after 1990, have exposed the farmers to new
challenges
 Despite being an important producer, farmers are not able to
compete with the developed countries because of the highly
subsidised agriculture in those countries

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Indian Agriculture: Way Ahead


 To make agriculture successful & profitable, marginal and small farmers’
condition must improve
 Green revolution promised much. But today it’s under controversies
 for land degradation, drying aquifers and vanishing biodiversity
 Keyword today is “gene revolution”. Which includes genetic engineering: BT
Cotton (Bacillus thuringiensis)
 Organic farming is much in vogue today, as it does not affect environment
 Economists think that Indian farmers have a bleak future
 600 million in India depend on 250 million hectares: < than 0.5 hectare/ farmer
 Urgent need to diversify cropping pattern from cereals to high-value crops
 Increase incomes and reduce environmental degradation simultaneously.
Because fruits, medicinal herbs, flowers, vegetables, bio-diesel crops like
jatropha and jojoba need much less irrigation than rice or sugarcane. India’s
diverse climate can be harnessed to grow a wide range of high-value crops.

 Change in from cereals to high-value crops will lead to India


importing food
 During 1960’s this would have been seen as a disaster.
 But if India imports cereals while exporting high-value commodities,
it will be following successful economies like Italy, Israel and Chile.
 These countries exports farm products (fruits, olives, speciality seeds
and wine) and import cereals. Are we ready to take this risk?
 Debate the issue

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