Relevance: GS III (Agriculture & Environment) | Source: The Hindu / Live Law
1. What is the News?
- The Supreme Court (SC) has asked the government to find ways to encourage farmers to stop growing only wheat and rice (paddy) and start growing pulses.
- The Reason: Growing too much paddy is drying up the groundwater in North India. Pulses are a great alternative because they need very little water.
2. Why are Farmers Hesitant?
- The “MSP” Safety Net: Farmers grow wheat and paddy because the government definitely buys them at a fixed price (Minimum Support Price).
- The Risk in Pulses: Farmers feel pulses are “risky” because there isn’t always a guaranteed buyer or price.
- The Problem with Imports: The SC noticed that the government allows cheap imports of pulses (like yellow peas). This makes the price of Indian-grown pulses crash, causing losses to our local farmers.
3. Court’s Advice to the Government
- Incentives: Give farmers a solid reason (like a better price or guaranteed sale) to switch to pulses.
- Expert Committee: Form a group of people who actually work with farmers on the ground to understand their real problems.
- Control Imports: Don’t let cheap foreign pulses destroy the market for Indian farmers.
4. Why Pulses are Good for the Earth?
- Natural Fertilizer: Pulse plants have tiny bumps on their roots (root nodules). These bumps take nitrogen from the air and put it back into the soil, making it fertile naturally.
- Water Savers: They are “water-efficient” crops, meaning they can grow with very little rain or irrigation compared to paddy.
The “UPSC Trap”
- The “Ban” Trap: The SC did not ban the import of pulses. It only asked the government to “rethink” the policy so that local farmers don’t suffer.
- The “Compulsory” Trap: Growing pulses is not mandatory. The court is only pushing for diversification (growing different types of crops instead of just one).
UPSC Value Box
| Key Term | Simple Meaning |
| Crop Diversification | Shifting from a single-crop system (like only rice) to growing multiple types of crops to save the soil and water. |
| Leguminous Plants | These are plants like peas, beans, and pulses that improve soil health by adding nitrogen to it. |
With reference to pulse cultivation in India, consider the following statements:
- The Supreme Court recently suggested that a guaranteed price and sale platform is necessary to move farmers away from the wheat-paddy cycle.
- Unlike paddy, pulses are leguminous crops that help in naturally restoring soil fertility through nitrogen fixation.
- Pulse cultivation is discouraged in India because it requires significantly more water than rice and wheat.
Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
(a) 1 and 2 only
(b) 2 and 3 only
(c) 1 and 3 only
(d) 1, 2 and 3
Correct Answer: (a)
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