कोशिश गोल्ड - मुक्त

Sifting out old habits

Financial Express Kochi

|

May 03, 2025

India is ambitiously treading on the path to sustainability with an aim to achieve net-zero greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by 2070.

- Amit Kapoor, Pradeep Puri & Ananya Khurana

Yet, Indian agriculture poses a formidable roadblock attributed to its significant GHG emissions. The roots of this issue trace back to the Green Revolution, which initially boosted food production but eventually became counterproductive.

In 2014, the Indian Agriculture Research Institute highlighted that the Indo-Gangetic Plains (IGP) exhibit the highest global warming potential due to large-scale rice cultivation. Even after a decade, the situation persists. Rice, an Indian staple, is known to be a water-intensive crop and relies heavily on nitrogenous fertilizers, leading to substantial methane emissions. Nonetheless, Indian agriculture can potentially become a beacon of environmental sustainability.

The Green Revolution introduced an intensive rice-wheat cropping pattern in India. Favorable agro-climatic conditions, abundant natural resources, government support through input subsidies for power, irrigation, and fertilizers, and assured procurement of paddy at predetermined prices enabled this shift. Consequently, states like Punjab and Haryana in the IGP witnessed surges in agricultural productivity.

Prior to the Green Revolution, paddy productivity in Punjab was approximately 1.51 tonnes/hectare (ha), which surged by 150% to 3.83 tonnes/ha in 2010-11. Similarly, in Haryana, productivity rose from 1.16 tonnes/ha to 2.79 tonnes/ha in the same period, indicating a 140% increase.

Eventually, the dark side of the revolution was noticeable in the deteriorating environmental quality. As paddy production requires an average of 18 irrigations over 135 days, its intensive cultivation has depleted natural resources. Additionally, the quantum of rice production results in significant residue, predominantly burnt due to limited sustainable alternatives.

Financial Express Kochi से और कहानियाँ

Financial Express Kochi

Why Supreme Court must side with SEC fraudster

NO ONE WANTS to come down on the side of people who commit fraud.

time to read

3 mins

January 19, 2026

Financial Express Kochi

Retail sector stress shows demand recovery uneven

THE DECEMBER QUARTER earnings of the country's top two organised retailersReliance Retail and Avenue Supermarts-point to a shaky recovery in consumer demand.

time to read

2 mins

January 19, 2026

Financial Express Kochi

Market players seek relief in equity tax

MARKET PARTICIPANTS HAVE urged the government to ease capital market taxation, including a higher exemption limit on long-term capital gains, ahead of the Union Budget.

time to read

1 min

January 19, 2026

Financial Express Kochi

Industry confidence rises to 5-quarter high in Q3: Survey

OPTIMISM GROWS

time to read

1 min

January 19, 2026

Financial Express Kochi

Markets jittery, but hopeful

THE MARKETS’ VOLATILE behaviour last week had the traders rattled as Nifty yo-yoed between 25,473 and 25,900 as it closed with a miniscule gain of just 11 points, or 0.04%, for the week at 25,694.

time to read

2 mins

January 19, 2026

Financial Express Kochi

Connecting Gemini to Google apps

AI CHATBOTS LIKE ChatGPT,Gemini, Claude and Perplexity are great, but one of the biggest problems with these Al-powered assistants is that they often forget personal details.

time to read

1 min

January 19, 2026

Financial Express Kochi

Greenland tariffs spur India to guard trade autonomy

THOUGH OFFICIALS INDICATE that a trade deal with the US is close,President Donald Trump’s Greenland-related tariffs on eight European countries highlight the need for greater caution on India’s part. New Delhi must safeguard its strategic autonomy and build adequate protections into any trade agreement, experts said.

time to read

1 mins

January 19, 2026

Financial Express Kochi

Greenland threats reopen tariff wounds in Europe

PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP'S fixation on Greenland offers an ice-cold reminder to leaders in Europe and abroad: No deal is ever final.

time to read

2 mins

January 19, 2026

Financial Express Kochi

Discoms back in the black after years

State-run units cut losses by 80% from FY23 to FY25

time to read

1 min

January 19, 2026

Financial Express Kochi

‘AI no longer an added layer on existing systems’

Enterprises are moving from experimental projects involving agentic AI to deploying pragmatic, enterprise-wide strategies that emphasise tangible business value. As these technologies mature, the competitive advantage will belong to organisations that invest equally in their people and their platforms, says Sandhya Arun, CTO, Wipro. “Ultimately, success will depend on talent readiness and continuous skilling,” she tells Sudhir Chowdhary in an interview. Excerpts:

time to read

2 mins

January 19, 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size