By the end of this chapter you'll be able to…

  • 1Explain the importance of manufacturing to the economy
  • 2Classify industries by raw material, role, ownership and size
  • 3Identify factors affecting industrial location
  • 4Describe major Indian industries with examples
  • 5Explain industrial pollution and its control
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Why this chapter matters
A classification-and-location geography chapter that reliably yields industry-classification, location-factor and pollution-control questions — dependable, structured marks.

Before you start — revise these

A 5-minute refresher here will save you 30 minutes of confusion below.

Manufacturing Industries — RBSE Class 10 (Geography)

Turning cotton into cloth, iron ore into steel, and steel into cars — that transformation of raw materials into finished goods is manufacturing, and it is the backbone of a modern economy. This chapter looks at how industries are classified, where they locate and why, and the price we pay in pollution.


1. Why manufacturing matters

Manufacturing lifts an economy by:

  • Reducing dependence on agriculture and providing jobs in secondary/tertiary sectors.
  • Adding value to raw materials and earning foreign exchange through exports.
  • Driving modernisation and prosperity (agriculture and industry move together).

The share of manufacturing in GDP is a marker of development; India aims to raise it.


2. Classification of industries

  • By raw materials: agro-based (cotton, sugar, jute) and mineral-based (iron & steel, cement).
  • By main role: basic/key industries (supply other industries — iron & steel) and consumer industries (make goods for direct use — sugar, toothpaste).
  • By capital investment: small-scale vs large-scale.
  • By ownership: public sector (government — SAIL), private sector (TISCO), joint sector and cooperative (e.g. Amul).
  • By weight of material: heavy (iron & steel) vs light (electronics).

3. Factors affecting location

Industries locate where costs are lowest and access is best: availability of raw materials, power, labour, capital, market, transport and water, plus government policy. Industries often cluster (agglomeration) to share infrastructure — forming industrial regions.

Example — iron & steel locates near coal + iron ore + water (Chhota Nagpur plateau: Jamshedpur, Durgapur, Bhilai, Rourkela). India is a major crude-steel producer.


4. Major industries

  • Textiles — the cotton textile industry is India's largest agro-based industry (Maharashtra, Gujarat, Tamil Nadu); it supports farmers, ginners, weavers and traders. Also jute (West Bengal) and synthetic textiles.
  • Iron & Steel — a basic industry (SAIL, TISCO); needs iron ore, coking coal, manganese, limestone.
  • Aluminium smelting — light, strong, corrosion-resistant metal (uses bauxite).
  • Chemical industries — fast-growing (fertilisers, plastics, dyes) — both organic and inorganic.
  • Cement — needs limestone, silica, gypsum, coal — essential for construction.
  • Automobile & IT — automobiles (Chennai, Pune, Gurugram) and the booming IT/electronics sector (Bengaluru) that earns huge foreign exchange.

5. Industrial pollution and control

Industries pollute:

  • Air (smoke, gases), water (chemical/organic effluents), land (waste dumping), noise and thermal pollution.

Control measures: treat effluents before release, reuse and recycle water, harvest rainwater, use cleaner fuels and technology, and follow environmental rules (e.g. the NTPC's efforts). Sustainable industry balances growth with the environment.


6. Closing thought

Manufacturing adds value, jobs and exports but must be located wisely and run cleanly. Learn the classification (by raw material, role, ownership), location factors, the major industries with examples, and pollution control. In the RBSE board this chapter reliably gives classification, location and pollution-control questions worth 5–6 marks.

Key formulas & results

Everything you need to memorise, in one card. Screenshot this for revision.

By raw material
agro-based (cotton, sugar) & mineral-based (steel, cement)
Source of inputs.
By role
basic/key (iron & steel) & consumer (sugar, toothpaste)
Supplies industry vs direct use.
By ownership
public (SAIL), private (TISCO), joint, cooperative (Amul)
Who owns it.
Location factors
raw material, power, labour, capital, market, transport
Determine where an industry sets up.
Iron & steel belt
Chhota Nagpur — Jamshedpur, Bhilai, Durgapur, Rourkela
Near coal + iron ore.
Pollution types
air, water, land, noise, thermal
Controlled by treatment/recycling/clean tech.
⚠️

Common mistakes & fixes

These are the exact errors that cost students marks in board exams. Read them once, save yourself the trouble.

WATCH OUT
Confusing basic and consumer industries
Basic/key industries supply other industries (iron & steel); consumer industries make goods for direct use (sugar, toothpaste).
WATCH OUT
Mixing agro-based and mineral-based
Agro-based use farm products (cotton, sugar, jute); mineral-based use minerals (steel, cement, aluminium).
WATCH OUT
Ignoring location factors in answers
State the specific factors (raw material, power, labour, market, transport) not just 'good location'.
WATCH OUT
Forgetting ownership types
Public (SAIL), private (TISCO), joint and cooperative (Amul) — give an example each.
WATCH OUT
Omitting pollution control
Pollution answers should include treatment, recycling water, clean fuel and following norms.

NCERT exercises (with solutions)

Every NCERT exercise from this chapter — what it covers and how many questions to expect.

Practice problems

Try each one yourself before tapping "Show solution". Active recall > rereading.

Q1EASY· Classify
Give one example each of an agro-based and a mineral-based industry.
Show solution
Agro-based: cotton textiles (or sugar). Mineral-based: iron & steel (or cement). ✦ Answer: cotton textiles (agro), iron & steel (mineral).
Q2EASY· Ownership
Name a public-sector and a cooperative-sector industry example.
Show solution
Public: SAIL. Cooperative: Amul. ✦ Answer: SAIL (public), Amul (cooperative).
Q3EASY· Fact
Which is India's largest agro-based industry?
Show solution
The cotton textile industry. ✦ Answer: cotton textiles.
Q4MEDIUM· Importance
Why is manufacturing important for the economy?
Show solution
Step 1 — It creates jobs and reduces dependence on agriculture. Step 2 — It adds value to raw materials and earns foreign exchange through exports. ✦ Answer: it generates jobs, adds value and earns foreign exchange.
Q5MEDIUM· Location
State the main factors that determine the location of an industry.
Show solution
Step 1 — Availability of raw materials, power and labour. Step 2 — Access to capital, market and transport (and government policy). ✦ Answer: raw material, power, labour, capital, market and transport.
Q6MEDIUM· Iron & steel
Why is the iron and steel industry located on the Chhota Nagpur plateau?
Show solution
Step 1 — It is close to iron ore, coking coal and manganese. Step 2 — Water and transport links are available, lowering costs. ✦ Answer: proximity to iron ore, coal and water/transport.
Q7HARD· Pollution
Describe how industries pollute the environment and suggest controls.
Show solution
Step 1 — They cause air (smoke/gases), water (effluents), land, noise and thermal pollution. Step 2 — Controls: treat effluents before release, recycle/reuse water, harvest rainwater. Step 3 — Use cleaner fuels/technology and follow environmental norms. ✦ Answer: multiple pollution types, controlled by treatment, recycling and clean technology.
Q8HARD· Analysis
How are agriculture and industry interdependent?
Show solution
Step 1 — Agro-industries depend on farm raw materials (cotton, sugarcane). Step 2 — Agriculture depends on industry for tools, fertilisers, pumps and machinery. Step 3 — Growth in one supports the other, boosting the whole economy. ✦ Answer: they supply each other's inputs and grow together.
Q9MEDIUM· IT
Why is the IT industry significant for India?
Show solution
Step 1 — It generates large employment for skilled workers. Step 2 — It earns substantial foreign exchange through software exports (e.g. Bengaluru hub). ✦ Answer: it provides skilled jobs and major export earnings.

5-minute revision

The whole chapter, distilled. Read this the night before the exam.

  • Manufacturing adds value, jobs and foreign exchange.
  • Classify by raw material, role, ownership, capital, weight.
  • Location factors: raw material, power, labour, capital, market, transport.
  • Iron & steel on Chhota Nagpur plateau (coal + iron ore + water).
  • Cotton textiles = largest agro-based industry.
  • Pollution: air, water, land, noise, thermal.
  • Controls: treat effluents, recycle water, clean tech, follow norms.

Rajasthan (RBSE) marks blueprint

Where the marks come from in this chapter — so you can plan your prep.

Typical chapter weightage: 5–6 marks

Question typeMarks eachTypical countWhat it tests
MCQ / very short11–2Classification and examples
Short answer21Location factors or importance
Long answer31Pollution control or interdependence
Prep strategy
  • Learn the classification schemes with an example each
  • Memorise location factors and the iron & steel case
  • Prepare the pollution-and-control long answer
  • Note agriculture–industry interdependence

Where this shows up in the real world

This chapter isn't just an exam topic — it lives in the world around you.

Industrial policy

Classification and location analysis guide where to set up factories.

Employment

Manufacturing and IT create jobs and export earnings.

Environmental management

Pollution-control methods protect air and water near industry.

Development planning

Balancing agriculture and industry drives growth.

Exam strategy

Battle-tested tips from teachers and toppers for this chapter.

  1. Give an example for each classification you mention.
  2. List location factors explicitly, not vaguely.
  3. Use the iron & steel belt as a location case study.
  4. Include control measures in pollution answers.
  5. Link agriculture and industry for interdependence questions.

Going beyond the textbook

For olympiad aspirants and curious learners — topics that build on this chapter.

  • Weber's theory of industrial location.
  • Special Economic Zones and industrial corridors.
  • Global value chains and Make in India.
  • Circular economy and industrial ecology.

Where else this chapter is tested

CBSE board isn't the only one — other exams test this chapter too.

RBSE Class 10 Board (BSER Ajmer)High — classification and pollution questions every year
NTSE / state scholarshipMedium — economic-geography MCQs
UPSC/State PSC FoundationMedium — industry and economy
Social Science OlympiadMedium — economic geography

Questions students ask

The real ones — pulled from the Q&A community and tutor sessions.

Yes — RBSE (BSER, Ajmer) prescribes the NCERT Social Science textbooks, so Geography chapters match the national syllabus while RBSE sets its own exam pattern.

Basic (key) industries supply raw materials to other industries (iron & steel); consumer industries produce goods for direct use by people (sugar, toothpaste).

Availability of raw materials, power, labour, capital, market and transport, along with government policy — industries settle where total costs are lowest.

By treating effluents before discharge, recycling and reusing water, harvesting rainwater, using cleaner fuels and technology, and following environmental regulations.
Verified by the tuition.in editorial team
Last reviewed on 1 July 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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