MS Swaminathan — the Lord Krishna Indian agriculture lacks today
- October 20, 2023
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
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MS Swaminathan — the Lord Krishna Indian agriculture lacks today
Subject: Geography
Section: Economic geography
Introduction:
- American agronomist Norman Borlaug came to Delhi accompanied by M S Swaminathan and decided to send about 100 kg seeds each of four semi-dwarf wheat varieties he had bred at Mexico under a Rockefeller Foundation-funded programme — Sonora 63, Sonora 64, Mayo 64 and Lerma Rojo 64A — for testing under Indian conditions.
- These varieties are less tall varieties with strong stems that responded to high-fertiliser doses and didn’t bend when their ears were heavy with well-filled grains.
Production of new crop varieties during Green Revolution:
- In 1965-66 and 1966-67, India suffered back-to-back droughts. As foodgrain production fell to 72-74 million tonnes (mt), from the previous five years’ average of 83 mt, imports soared and touched 10.4 mt in 1966.
- As the imported seeds (of Maxican varieties) got planted on a large scale, foodgrain output crossed 95 mt in 1967-68 and 108.5 mt by 1970-71.
- Wheat production alone more than doubled from 11.4 mt to 23.8 mt between 1966-67 and 1970-71.
- Now India has also developed its own hybrid wheat varieties viz. Kalyansona and Sonalika varieties.
- These produced amber-coloured grains with better chapati-making quality than the red kernels from the original Mexican varieties.
- Other Wheat varieties: Arjun, HD 2285 and HD 2329
- Rice varieties: IR 36 and IR64, Swarna and Samba Mahsuri.
M.S. Swaminathan:
- As early as January 1968, he flagged the risks of pathogen and pest attacks from mono-cropping and unscientific tapping of underground water leading to the rapid exhaustion of this capital resource left to us through ages of natural farming.
- The Green Revolution relied on breeding varieties enabling farmers to apply more nutrients and water.
- This “more input, more output strategy” has yielded diminishing returns over time, apart from being environmentally and financially unsustainable.
- Mr. Swaminathan would have focused on technologies for improved nutrient and water use efficiency (“less input, more output”) and breeding for climate change.
- He would have championed cutting-edge agricultural biotechnology, gene modification and editing research with the same zeal as with the semi-dwarf wheat and rice varieties.
White revolution:
- Operation Flood, launched on 13 January 1970, was the world’s largest dairy development program and a landmark project of India’s National Dairy Development Board (NDDB).
- It transformed India from a milk-deficient nation into the world’s largest milk producer, surpassing the United States of America in 1998 with about 22.29 percent of global output in 2018.
- Within 30 years, it doubled the milk available per person in India and made dairy farming India’s largest self-sustainable rural employment generator.
- The program was launched to help farmers direct their own development, and to give them control of the resources they create. The program has since been termed the “White Revolution”.
- Verghese Kurien is known as the father of the White Revolution.
- He provided Amul with its technical backbone and invented the world’s first spray dryer (H M Dalaya) for making powder from buffalo milk.
Source: IE