Agriculture
Introduction
'Agriculture is the BACKBONE of the Indian economy. 60%+ of India's population depends on AGRICULTURE. India is the WORLD'S largest producer of milk, pulses, spices, and second-largest producer of rice, wheat, sugarcane, cotton, and tea. ICSE examiners ALWAYS test: TYPES of farming, MAJOR crops with their climatic requirements, producing states, and the IMPACT of the Green Revolution.'
Types of Farming
| Type | Description | Where Practiced |
|---|
| SUBSISTENCE | Grow JUST enough for the family — simple tools | REMOTE areas, small farmers |
| INTENSIVE | HIGH yields per unit of land — MORE labour | Densely populated areas — Punjab, West Bengal |
| EXTENSIVE | LOW yield per unit — LARGE farms | Mechanised — USA, Canada (NOT common in India) |
| PLANTATION | SINGLE crop grown on LARGE estates | Tea (Assam), Coffee (Karnataka), Rubber (Kerala) |
| MIXED | CROPS + LIVESTOCK together | In some parts of India |
Cropping Seasons in India
| Season | Months | Crops | Examples |
|---|
| RABI | Oct–Dec (sown), Apr–Jun (harvested) | WINTER crops — need COOL climate | Wheat, Barley, Mustard, Peas, Gram |
| KHARIF | Jun–Jul (sown), Sep–Oct (harvested) | MONSOON crops — need RAIN | Rice, Jowar, Bajra, Cotton, Jute, Sugarcane |
| ZAID | April–June | SUMMER crops | Watermelon, Cucumber, Fodder |
Major Food Crops
1. Rice
| Aspect | Detail |
|---|
| Climate | 22–32°C temperature. 150–300 cm rainfall |
| Soil | ALLUVIAL (clayey) — water RETENTIVE |
| States | West Bengal (LARGEST producer), UP, Andhra, Punjab, Odisha, Bihar |
| Type | KHARIF crop (some areas — Rabi with irrigation) |
| ICSE Note | 'India is the 2nd LARGEST producer of rice in the world (after China)' |
2. Wheat
| Aspect | Detail |
|---|
| Climate | 10–25°C (cool). 50–100 cm rainfall |
| Soil | FERTILE alluvial — well-DRAINED |
| States | Uttar Pradesh (LARGEST), Punjab, Haryana, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan |
| Type | RABI crop — sown in October–December |
| Significance | GREEN REVOLUTION success — Punjab and Haryana are the 'BREAD BASKET' of India |
3. Millets (Coarse Grains)
| Millet | Climate | Largest State | ICSE Note |
|---|
| JOWAR | DRY — 40–50 cm | Maharashtra | 'Poor man's food — HIGH nutrition' |
| BAJRA | DRY — sandy soil | Rajasthan | 'EATS well in arid conditions' |
| RAGI | MODERATE rainfall | Karnataka | 'RICH in calcium — finger millet' |
4. Pulses
| Aspect | Detail |
|---|
| Examples | Toor (Arhar), Urad, Moong, Masur, Gram, Peas |
| Importance | MAIN source of PROTEIN for Indians |
| Soil | DRY — require less water |
| States | Madhya Pradesh (largest), UP, Rajasthan, Maharashtra |
Major Cash Crops
5. Sugarcane
| Aspect | Detail |
|---|
| Climate | 20–26°C. 100–150 cm rainfall |
| Soil | ALLUVIAL — fertile, well-drained |
| States | Uttar Pradesh (LARGEST — 40% of India), Maharashtra, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu |
| Uses | Sugar, Jaggery (Gur), Biofuel (Ethanol) |
| Type | KHARIF + ZAID — takes 10–15 months |
6. Cotton
| Aspect | Detail |
|---|
| Climate | 20–30°C. 60–100 cm rainfall. FROST-FREE |
| Soil | BLACK soil (Regur) — MOST suitable |
| States | Gujarat (LARGEST), Maharashtra, Telangana, Karnataka, Punjab |
| Type | KHARIF — sown in June–July |
| Uses | TEXTILES — cotton cloth |
7. Jute
| Aspect | Detail |
|---|
| Climate | 24–35°C. 150–300 cm rainfall. HIGH humidity |
| Soil | ALLUVIAL — RIVERINE |
| States | West Bengal (LARGEST — 70%), Assam, Bihar |
| Uses | Gunny bags, Ropes, Carpets — 'GOLDEN FIBRE' |
Plantation Crops
8. Tea
| Aspect | Detail |
|---|
| Climate | 20–30°C. 150–250 cm rainfall. FROST-FREE |
| Soil | Well-drained LOAM — rich in organic matter |
| States | Assam (LARGEST), West Bengal (Darjeeling), Tamil Nadu (Nilgiris), Kerala |
| Rank | 2nd LARGEST producer in world (after China). 4th LARGEST exporter |
| ICSE Note | 'Darjeeling tea is FAMOUS for its flavour — GEOGRAPHICAL INDICATION tag' |
9. Coffee
| Aspect | Detail |
|---|
| Climate | 15–28°C. 150–250 cm. SHADE-LOVING |
| States | Karnataka (LARGEST — 70%), Kerala, Tamil Nadu |
| Type | ARABICA (better quality) and ROBUSTA |
10. Rubber
| Aspect | Detail |
|---|
| Climate | 24–35°C. 200+ cm. HIGH humidity |
| States | Kerala (LARGEST — 80%), Tamil Nadu, Karnataka |
| Uses | Tyres, Footwear, Industrial products |
The Green Revolution
| Aspect | Detail |
|---|
| Period | 1960s–1970s |
| Architect | Dr M.S. SWAMINATHAN (father of Green Revolution in India) |
| Key Elements | HIGH-YIELDING VARIETY (HYV) seeds, FERTILISERS, PESTICIDES, IRRIGATION, MECHANISATION |
| Focus Crops | WHEAT and RICE |
| Success States | PUNJAB, HARYANA, Western Uttar Pradesh |
Achievements
| Achievement | Detail |
|---|
| Food grain production | INCREASED from 82 million tonnes (1960) to 330+ million tonnes (2024) |
| Self-sufficiency | India is NOW self-sufficient in FOOD grains |
| Wheat revolution | Punjab and Haryana — 'BREAD BASKET OF INDIA' |
Limitations
| Limitation | Detail |
|---|
| Regional | BENEFITED only Punjab, Haryana, Western UP — rest of India LAGGED |
| Environmental | OVERUSE of fertilisers and pesticides — soil DEGRADATION |
| Water | DEPLETED groundwater — Punjab water table FALLING |
| Social | WIDENED gap between LARGE and SMALL farmers |
Common Mistakes in ICSE Answers
| Mistake | Correction |
|---|
| Calling RABI and KHARIF crops by WRONG seasons | Rabi = WINTER (wheat). Kharif = MONSOON (rice) |
| Forgetting GREEN REVOLUTION STATES | Punjab, Haryana — NOT all of India |
| Ignoring TEA growing conditions | Needs FROST-FREE climate + well-drained LOAM |
| Confusing JUTE and COTTON states | Jute = West Bengal. Cotton = Gujarat/Maharashtra |
ICSE Exam Focus — Marks Blueprint
| Question Type | Marks | Frequency |
|---|
| Types of farming — subsistence vs commercial | 4-6 | Always |
| Rice — climatic conditions and states | 4-6 | Always |
| Wheat — Rabi crop, states, Green Revolution | 4-6 | Always |
| Cash crops — Cotton, Sugarcane, Jute | 6-8 | Very High |
| Plantation crops — Tea, Coffee, Rubber | 4-6 | Very High |
| Green Revolution — achievements and limitations | 6-8 | Very High |
Self-Test
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Seasons: Differentiate between RABI and KHARIF crops. Give THREE examples of EACH.
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Rice: What are the CLIMATIC requirements for rice cultivation? Name the TOP THREE rice-producing states.
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Wheat: Where is wheat grown in India? Why is it a RABI crop? Which states benefited MOST from the Green Revolution?
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Cotton: Why is BLACK SOIL ideal for cotton cultivation? Which state is the LARGEST producer?
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Tea: What are the CLIMATIC requirements for tea? Which regions are FAMOUS for tea in India?
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Green Revolution: Who was the ARCHITECT of the Green Revolution in India? What were its MAIN ACHIEVEMENTS and LIMITATIONS?
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Comparison: Compare the GEOGRAPHICAL requirements of TEA and COFFEE. Which state is the LARGEST producer of EACH?