Does India Need Green Revolution 2.0 ?
Does India Need Green Revolution 2.0?
India needs
a second green revolution along with the next generation of reforms to make agriculture
more climate-resistant and environmentally sustainable.
Observing
that Indian agriculture has exhibited remarkable resilience during the COVID-19
period, new emerging challenges warrant a second green revolution along with
next-generation reforms.
Despite the
success in terms of production that has ensured food security in the country,
food inflation and its volatility remain a challenge, which requires
supply-side interventions such as higher public investment, storage
infrastructure and promotion of food processing.
The sector,
however, confronted various challenges, mitigation of which requires a holistic
policy approach.
For
instance, crop productivity in India is much lower than in other advanced and
emerging market economies due to various factors, like fragmented landholdings,
lower farm mechanization and lower public and private investment in
agriculture.
Secondly, the current overproduction of crops like rice,
wheat and sugarcane, has led to rapid depletion of the ground-water table, soil
degradation and massive air pollution raising questions about the environmental
sustainability of current agricultural practices in India.
Also,
despite surplus production in many of the commodities, food inflation and
volatility in prices continue to remain high causing inconvenience to consumers
and low and fluctuating income for farmers.
Addressing
these challenges would require a second green revolution focussed on the
agriculture water-energy nexus, making agriculture more climate resistant and
environmentally sustainable. The use of biotechnology and breeding will be
important in developing eco-friendly, disease-resistant, climate-resilient,
more nutritious and diversified crop varieties.
Wider use
of digital technology and extension services will be helpful in information
sharing and generating awareness among the farmers.
It also
stressed that better post-harvest loss management and a revamp of the co-operative
movement through the formation of farmer-producer organizations (FPOs) can
arrest the volatility in food prices and farmers' income and help harness the
true potential of Indian agriculture.
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