Diversify agriculture and encourage farmers to grow pulses, SC tells govt.

Here is the complete UPSC study note:


Supreme Court Directive on Agricultural Diversification & Pulse Cultivation

Topic: Diversify Agriculture and Encourage Farmers to Grow Pulses — SC Tells Govt.


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Crops in focus Tur/Arhar, Urad, Masoor, Moong, Chana, Yellow Peas
MSP-recommending body Commission for Agricultural Costs and Prices (CACP)
Procurement scheme Price Support Scheme (PSS) under PM-AASHA
Nodal ministries (SC-identified) Agriculture; Commerce; Consumer Affairs
PM-AASHA guarantee (revised) ₹60,000 crore (from ₹45,000 crore)
Procurement guarantee (Budget 2025) 100% of tur, urad, masoor production for 4 years (till 2028-29)
Total pulse production 2024-25 252.38 lakh MT (3rd Advance Estimate) — up 31% from 192.6 LMT in 2013-14 [S4]
Pulse imports 2023-24 47.38 lakh MT [S4]
Pulse exports 2023-24 5.94 lakh MT [S4]
Yellow peas duty-free import Allowed until 20 February 2025 [S4]
Tur production 2024-25 35.02 LMT (↑2.5% YoY) [S4]
Mission for Aatmanirbharta in Pulses Period: 2025-26 to 2030-31; Cabinet approval: 1 October 2025 [S5]
NITI Aayog report "Strategies and Pathways for Accelerating Growth in Pulses towards the Goal of Atmanirbharta" [S5]
SC Bench Headed by CJI Surya Kant

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Environmental

Legal / Constitutional

Social

Administrative

Historical


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. Pulses are classified as Kharif, Rabi, or Zaid crops depending on variety: Tur and Moong are primarily Kharif; Masoor and Chana are Rabi. [S2]
  2. MSP for pulses is recommended by the Commission for Agricultural Costs and Prices (CACP) and approved by the Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs (CCEA). [S2]
  3. PM-AASHA (launched 2018) is the umbrella scheme for MSP-based procurement; pulse procurement under it uses the Price Support Scheme (PSS). [S3]
  4. The PM-AASHA guarantee was enhanced from ₹45,000 crore to ₹60,000 crore in Union Budget 2025-26. [S2]
  5. India's total pulse production in 2024-25 (3rd Advance Estimate): 252.38 lakh MT — a 31% rise over 192.6 LMT in 2013-14. [S4]
  6. India imported 47.38 lakh MT of pulses in 2023-24 while exporting only 5.94 lakh MT — making it a net importer. [S4]
  7. Duty-free import of yellow peas was allowed until 20 February 2025 to check domestic inflation. [S4]
  8. Agriculture is a State subject under Schedule VII, List II, Entry 14 of the Constitution — Centre's role is via concurrent and union-level fiscal instruments.
  9. The SC directive (March 2026) named three ministries responsible for pulse policy reform: Agriculture, Commerce, and Consumer Affairs. [S1]
  10. Mission for Aatmanirbharta in Pulses: approved by Union Cabinet on 1 October 2025; runs from 2025-26 to 2030-31. [S5]
  11. Pulses fix atmospheric nitrogen — they are naturally soil-enriching and reduce dependence on synthetic nitrogenous fertilisers.
  12. The SC Bench directing agricultural diversification was headed by Chief Justice of India Surya Kant. [S1]
  13. The FAO designated 2016 as the International Year of Pulses, aligning India's domestic pulse push with global efforts. [S6]
  14. NITI Aayog published the report "Strategies and Pathways for Accelerating Growth in Pulses towards the Goal of Atmanirbharta" as the policy framework. [S5]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Syllabus Heading
GS-III Indian Economy — Agriculture; Food Security; MSP and procurement mechanisms
GS-II Government policies and interventions; Role of judiciary in policymaking
GS-III Environmental sustainability — Cropping pattern, water use, stubble burning

Plausible Mains Question Stems:

  1. "The Supreme Court's directive to diversify agriculture towards pulses highlights the structural failures of India's MSP and procurement architecture. Critically examine." (GS-III)
  2. "India's paddy-wheat monoculture in North India is an ecological and economic liability. Discuss the challenges and policy imperatives for agricultural diversification with reference to pulses." (GS-III)
  3. "Judicial intervention in executive agricultural policy — a necessary corrective or an overreach? Analyse with reference to recent Supreme Court directions on pulse cultivation." (GS-II)

9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
MSP & CACP Core mechanism for price incentives the SC flagged as inadequate for pulses
PM-AASHA & Price Support Scheme (PSS) Existing procurement framework for pulses; its design flaws are at the heart of the SC case
National Food Security Act, 2013 Pulses as protein security; NFSA's focus on cereals has historically sidelined pulses
Crop Diversification Programme (CDP) Specific central scheme targeting wheat-paddy belt diversification in Punjab, Haryana, UP
Paddy Stubble Burning & Air Pollution Direct consequence of paddy dominance; diversification is a mitigation strategy
Green Revolution & its Aftermath Historical roots of monoculture; UPSC frequently asks its long-term consequences
India's Import Dependency in Oilseeds & Pulses Parallel issue; government's Aatmanirbharta drive covers both; similar structural problems
WTO Agreement on Agriculture (AoA) India's MSP and procurement schemes face scrutiny under WTO subsidy norms — relevant for judicial-policy intersection [S6]

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Confusing PM-AASHA sub-schemes: PM-AASHA has three sub-components — PSS (Price Support Scheme for pulses/oilseeds), PDPS (Price Deficiency Payment Scheme), and PPIS (Private Procurement & Stockist Scheme). Students often conflate them.
  2. MSP has no statutory backing — a common error is to assume MSP is legally guaranteed. It is purely an administrative mechanism; there is no law mandating procurement at MSP.
  3. Yellow peas ≠ Chana (chickpea) — yellow peas (Pisum sativum) are a distinct import commodity; confusing them with domestic chana (gram) distorts the import substitution argument.
  4. Agriculture is a State subject (List II, Entry 14) — students often wrongly place it in the Concurrent List. The Centre influences it through centrally sponsored schemes and MSP, not direct legislation.
  5. Mission for Aatmanirbharta in Pulses vs. National Food Security Mission (NFSM) — NFSM (launched 2007) also covers pulses but is older and broader; the 2025 Mission is a newer, dedicated intervention. Do not conflate the two.

11. Sources