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Relevance: General Studies Paper III (Agriculture, Cropping Patterns, Science and Technology in Indian Economy) Source: Union Cabinet / Press Information Bureau, 2026

In May 2026 the Union Cabinet approved the Mission for Cotton Productivity with an outlay of ₹5,659.22 crore (2026-27 to 2030-31). It aims to lift lint yield from 440 kg/ha to 755 kg/ha and reach 498 lakh bales by 2031. The push comes after a decade of falling output that has turned India — once a top cotton exporter — into a net importer.

1 · The Decline Behind the Mission

  • Output has shrunk: production fell from about 398 lakh bales (2013-14) to roughly 297 lakh bales (2024-25), sliding at nearly 2% a year.
  • From exporter to importer: India now buys cotton from abroad (around 40 lakh bales) to feed its textile mills.
  • Slipped to second: India is now the world’s second-largest producer (behind China), despite having the largest cotton area at about 11 million hectares.
  • The core weakness: among major producers, India has one of the lowest yields — big on land, small on output per hectare.

2 · The Yield Gap (kg of lint per hectare)

Australia
2,340
China
2,311
Brazil
1,943
United States
976
India · 2031 target
755
India · now
440

Bt cotton is a genetically modified cotton that carries a gene from the soil bacterium Bacillus thuringiensis, letting the plant make its own protein to kill bollworm pests. Lint is the cleaned cotton fibre, and in India one bale = 170 kg of lint.

3 · Core analysis

A. How science built the boom (2002–2014)

  • 2002 – Bt cotton: the Centre cleared India’s first pest-resistant hybrids (the cry1Ac gene).
  • 2006 – Bollgard II: the Genetic Engineering Appraisal Committee (GEAC) approved a two-gene version with stronger resistance.
  • The payoff: production jumped about 193% (136 to 398 lakh bales) and yield rose from 302 to 566 kg/ha, making India a global leader.

B. How price controls reversed it

  • Seed price caps: from 2006, states capped seed-packet prices, squeezing the trait fee (royalty) paid to seed developers.
  • 2015 Cotton Seed Price (Control) Order: cut the trait fee by about 74% (₹186.95 to ₹49); by 2020 it was scrapped entirely.
  • Innovation stalled: with no way to recover research costs, firms withdrew next-generation seeds (Bollgard III, herbicide-tolerant types) from GEAC review.

C. The result: a technology trap

  • Stuck on old tech: while rivals moved to multi-gene seeds, Indian farmers rely on decade-old hybrids that pests have learnt to beat.
  • Twin failure: private research dried up, and public research was not scaled up to fill the gap.

4 · Way forward

Make IP rules predictable. Revisit the Cotton Seed Price (Control) Order so developers can recover costs and bring new seeds back to India.
Scale up public research. If the private sector stays out, fund bodies like the ICAR-Central Institute for Cotton Research at a scale that closes the gap.
Deliver the mission’s tools. Push high-yielding, climate-resilient, pest-resistant seeds and the 5F vision (Farm-Fibre-Factory-Fashion-Foreign), with Kasturi Cotton Bharat for quality branding.
Make biosafety clearance certain. Give GEAC a transparent, time-bound process that protects the environment while giving investors confidence.

The Mission’s targets are bold, but money alone cannot raise yields on outdated seeds. India’s cotton story shows that technology — not just spending — drove the earlier boom. Unless the policy either rewards private innovation or properly funds public research, the country risks staying a permanent net importer of a crop it once exported.

UPSC Value Box
Mission for Cotton Productivity ₹5,659.22 crore, 2026-27 to 2030-31; target 755 kg/ha and 498 lakh bales by 2031.
Bt Cotton GM cotton (cry1Ac gene) resisting bollworm; approved 2002, Bollgard II in 2006.
GEAC Genetic Engineering Appraisal Committee under MoEF&CC; clears GM crop release.
Cotton Seed Price (Control) Order, 2015 Capped seed prices and trait fee; cut royalties ~74%; fee scrapped by 2020.
ICAC International Cotton Advisory Committee; source for global yield comparisons.
Kasturi Cotton Bharat Textiles Ministry + CCI branding/traceability scheme; trash content target <2%.
5F Vision Farm to Fibre to Factory to Fashion to Foreign — the textile value-chain framework.

Quick Revision
  • Mission for Cotton Productivity — ₹5,659.22 crore; approved May 2026; runs 2026-27 to 2030-31.
  • Implemented jointly by Ministry of Agriculture & Farmers Welfare and Ministry of Textiles.
  • Targets: yield 440 → 755 kg/ha; production 498 lakh bales by 2031; ~32 lakh farmers.
  • In India, 1 bale = 170 kg of lint.
  • India = world’s second-largest producer; largest area (~11 million ha) but low yield.
  • GEAC (under MoEF&CC) is the apex body for GM crop clearance.
  • Bt cotton approved 2002; Bollgard II in 2006.
  • 5F vision: Farm-Fibre-Factory-Fashion-Foreign.

Mains Practice Question
India’s cotton stagnation is a story of policy reversing the gains of technology. Critically examine, and assess whether the Mission for Cotton Productivity can succeed without reforming the seed-pricing and biosafety regime. (15 marks · 250 words)
Structure hint:
Introduction — open with the yield gap (440 kg/ha vs 755 target / global leaders above 2,000)
Body Part 1 — the technology-led boom (Bt cotton 2002, Bollgard II 2006, +193% output)
Body Part 2 — the policy reversal (price caps, 2015 Control Order, withdrawal of next-gen seeds)
Body Part 3 — what the Mission offers and its blind spot (seed IP + GEAC certainty)
Way Forward — IP predictability, scaled public R&D, transparent biosafety clearance
Must mention:
Bt cotton / Bollgard II ·
GEAC ·
Cotton Seed Price (Control) Order, 2015 ·
Trait fee ·
5F vision & Kasturi Cotton Bharat
Conclusion hint: Close by arguing that durable self-reliance needs technology and a predictable regulatory-cum-pricing framework, not spending alone.

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