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Seeds of change

Financial Express Kochi

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December 05, 2025

WHILE INDIA IS STILL DEBATING THE SCOPE OF GM CROP CULTIVATION, IT CAN'T IGNORE THE GLOBAL MOMENTUM

- AMIT KAPOOR PRADEEP PURI

IN 1994, A tomato changed the world! Flavr Savr, a tomato produced in California, USA, ushered in an era where science could modify crops at the genetic level.

Since then, genetically modified (GM) crops have evolved from mere lab experiments to global agricultural staples, driven by breakthroughs in transgenics and gene editing.

In the initial two decades of GM crop commercialisation, global adoption was largely limited to maize, soya bean, and cotton. Eventually, the landscape expanded to include wheat, tomatoes, bananas, and alfalfa, each engineered for pest resistance, drought tolerance, and enhanced nutritional value. Yet, this transformation is far from uniform.

As GM crops continue to reshape agriculture, countries around the world are charting vastly different paths, presenting a mosaic of GM crop adoption. While some countries are sprinting ahead with innovation, such as the US, others in Europe, Asia, and Africa are treading cautiously through layers of domestic regulations and public debate. Moreover, according to the World Health Organization, GM food consumption has no apparent adverse effects on human health, subject to sufficiently rigorous and long-term safety testing protocols. Still, the divergence in regulatory models and public sentiment is stark across the globe. It is particularly relevant for India to understand the root cause of this divergence as the country crafts its own road map for biotechnology in agriculture. Doing so will help ensure that policy decisions strike a balance between innovation, biosafety, and public trust in a rapidly evolving agricultural future.

Financial Express Kochi'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE

Financial Express Kochi

RIL arm inks deal with Nigerian group

RELIANCE CONSUMER PRODUCTS (RCPL), the FMCG arm of Reliance Industries, on Monday said it has signed a definitive agreement to form a majority-owned joint venture with Nigerian conglomerate Tropical General Investments Group.

time to read

1 mins

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Financial Express Kochi

US to cut reciprocal tariff this week: Commerce secy

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time to read

2 mins

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Financial Express Kochi

Exports of marine items increase 15% in Apr-Jan

DESPITE BEING HIT by the high US tariffs, India’ marine products exports increased by over 15% to $7.17 billion in April-January 2025-26, due to a huge surge in shipments to several new markets such as Vietnam and the European Union (EU), according to commerce ministry officials.

time to read

1 min

February 17, 2026

Financial Express Kochi

JSW MG lines up ₹4,000 cr to triple its India capacity

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time to read

2 mins

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Financial Express Kochi

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time to read

1 mins

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Financial Express Kochi

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time to read

1 mins

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Financial Express Kochi

Unesco flags governance, inclusion gaps in AI readiness

WHILE INDIA'S

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1 min

February 17, 2026

Financial Express Kochi

Youth unemployment rate rises to 14.7% in January

Joblessness in urban areas at 7%

time to read

2 mins

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Financial Express Kochi

'Al is now driving early disease detection'

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time to read

2 mins

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Financial Express Kochi

Desi AI: A blueprint for leadership

ANTHROPIC'S RELEASE OF Claude Cowork and Claude Code triggered a sharp dip in Indian IT stocks, signalling a vastly changed technology ecosystem. India’s manpower-intensive services companies are clearly under threat from artificial intelligence (AI), anda transition to an intellectual property-driven future leveraging Alis now an existential necessity. When confronted in Davos recently with the label “second-tier AI power”, Union Technology Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw gave a thoughtful riposte, laying out a layered AI taxonomy and arguing that leadership in many of the layers makes India decidedly not second tier. While this assertion is sound, the underlying anxiety is real—Indians aspire to a indigenous or desi AI that is an unequivocal global leader. The key question about realising this aspiration is not if the government should be involved, but how. We answer this through a careful examination of historical successes and failures in governance of technology development—from Tokyo to Washington, and from Centre For Development Of Telematics (C-DoT) to United Payments Interface (UPI).

time to read

3 mins

February 17, 2026

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