Why does India need climate- resilient agriculture?


Why Does India Need Climate-Resilient Agriculture?

UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note | GS-III | Environment & Agriculture


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
2008 National Action Plan on Climate Change (NAPCC) launched; National Mission for Sustainable Agriculture (NMSA) identified as one of its 8 missions [S5]
2011 NICRA (National Innovations in Climate Resilient Agriculture) launched by ICAR as a flagship network project [S1][S2]
2014–2024 ICAR releases 2,900 crop varieties over 10 years; 2,661 tolerant to one or more biotic/abiotic stresses [S3]
2014 onwards NICRA demonstrates technologies in 448 Climate Resilient Villages (CRVs) across 151 climatically vulnerable districts in 28 states/UTs [S2]
2024–25 Government scales climate-resilient farming nationally; promotes genome-edited crops and AI-driven farm advisories [S3][S5]

4. Core Static Facts

Definition & Components

Implementing Bodies

Body Role
ICAR (under Ministry of Agriculture & Farmers' Welfare) Nodal agency for NICRA; develops CRA varieties
Ministry of Agriculture & Farmers' Welfare Policy & scheme implementation
NMSA Overarching climate-agriculture policy mission under NAPCC

Key Numbers

Indicator Figure Source
Rainfed share of net sown area ~51% [S1]
Food produced from rainfed land ~40% [S1]
Agricultural districts risk-mapped 651 [S2]
Vulnerable districts 310 (109 very high + 201 high) [S2]
Climate Resilient Villages (CRVs) 448 across 151 districts, 28 states/UTs [S2]
Training programs under NICRA (9 years) 16,958 programs, covering 5,14,816 stakeholders [S2]
Stress-tolerant varieties released (2014–24) 2,661 of 2,900 total releases [S3]

Enabling Policy Instrument


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Social

Environmental

Scientific / Technological

Administrative

Ethical / Governance


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. NICRA stands for National Innovations in Climate Resilient Agriculture, launched by ICAR in 2011. [S1][S2]
  2. NICRA has demonstrated technologies in 448 Climate Resilient Villages (CRVs) across 151 climatically vulnerable districts in 28 states/UTs. [S2]
  3. India's 651 agricultural districts were risk-mapped under NICRA; 310 found vulnerable (109 very high + 201 highly vulnerable). [S2]
  4. Approximately 51% of India's net sown area is rainfed, yet this land produces nearly 40% of the country's food. [S1]
  5. NICRA conducted 16,958 training programs covering 5,14,816 stakeholders over nine years. [S2]
  6. ICAR released 2,900 crop varieties in 2014–2024; of these, 2,661 are tolerant to biotic and/or abiotic stresses. [S3]
  7. National Mission for Sustainable Agriculture (NMSA) is the CRA-relevant mission under NAPCC (2008) — one of 8 National Missions. [S5]
  8. CRA tools include biofertilizers, biopesticides, soil-microbiome analysis, genome-edited crops, and AI-driven analytics. [S1]
  9. Genome-edited crops can be developed for tolerance to drought, heat, salinity, and pest pressure — distinct from GMOs under India's 2022 regulatory notification. [S1][S6]
  10. Climate change is projected to reduce yield of rainfed rice, wheat, and Kharif maize in the absence of adaptation measures. [S5]
  11. Implementing agency for NICRA: ICAR under the Ministry of Agriculture & Farmers' Welfare (not MoEFCC). [S2]
  12. Agroforestry, zero-till sowing, crop diversification, and micro-irrigation are among the CRA technologies demonstrated through NICRA. [S2]
  13. NICRA is a network project (not a standalone central scheme) — it operates across multiple ICAR institutes coordinated under a flagship programme structure. [S2]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Papers: Primarily GS-III (Agriculture; Science & Technology; Environment) Specific Syllabus Headings: - GS-III: "Major crops, cropping patterns in various parts of India; different types of irrigation and irrigation systems; storage, transport and marketing of agricultural produce"; "Issues related to direct and indirect farm subsidies and minimum support prices"; "Science and Technology — developments and their applications and effects in everyday life"; "Conservation, environmental pollution and degradation" - GS-I: "Distribution of key natural resources"; Climate and its impacts on Indian agriculture

Plausible Mains Question Stems:

  1. "Climate-resilient agriculture is not merely a technological challenge but a governance imperative for India. Critically examine." (GS-III, 250 words)
  2. "India's rainfed agriculture is both the backbone of food security and its most climate-vulnerable component. Discuss the role of NICRA and genome-edited crops in addressing this paradox." (GS-III, 250 words)
  3. "Evaluate the potential of AI-driven precision agriculture and biotechnology in transforming India's smallholder farming sector in the context of climate change." (GS-III, 150 words)

9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
National Mission for Sustainable Agriculture (NMSA) Overarching policy umbrella under which CRA is pursued
PM Fasal Bima Yojana Risk transfer mechanism for climate-exposed farmers — complements CRA
Genome Editing Regulation in India (2022 notification) Regulatory enabler for CRA's biotech pillar
Soil Health Card Scheme Feeds directly into CRA's soil-microbiome and nutrient management agenda
National Action Plan on Climate Change (NAPCC) Parent framework housing NMSA; tests knowledge of all 8 missions
Zero-Budget Natural Farming (ZBNF) / Natural Farming Overlapping but distinct school of sustainable agriculture; often confused with CRA
Agroforestry Policy 2014 Agroforestry is a core CRA technology; tested as standalone topic
India's NDC Commitments (Updated 2022) Agriculture features in mitigation + adaptation pledges; ties CRA to international obligations

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. NICRA ≠ a Central Sector Scheme: NICRA is a network project under ICAR, not a standalone ministry scheme like PM-KISAN. Do not confuse with NMSA (which is the scheme).
  2. Implementing agency confusion: NICRA is under ICAR / Ministry of Agriculture & Farmers' Welfare — NOT the Ministry of Environment, Forest & Climate Change (MoEFCC).
  3. Genome-edited crops ≠ GMOs under India's 2022 notification: genome-edited crops with no foreign DNA inserted are regulated differently — a common source of MCQ traps.
  4. NICRA launch year: Launched in 2011, not 2008 (when NAPCC was launched). Conflating NAPCC's 2008 launch with NICRA's 2011 start is a frequent error.
  5. Rainfed statistics: "51% of net sown area is rainfed" and "40% of food comes from rainfed land" are the correct figures — aspirants often invert or round these numbers loosely.
  6. NMSA is one of 8 (not 9 or 7) National Missions under NAPCC — the total number of missions is frequently mis-remembered.

11. Sources