Singh calls for 2nd ‘green revolution’
INDIA: India’s Premier called Saturday for a second “green
revolution” to boost agricultural output as the country celebrated its
national independence day in the grip of its worst drought in years.
The country “needs another Green Revolution and we will try our best
to make it possible,” Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said in an
Independence Day speech marking the end of British colonial rule in
1947.
Singh was referring to the country’s “Green Revolution” of the 1960s,
which quadrupled food production through planting of high-yield grains
and made India self-sufficient, transforming it from a starving nation
into a food exporter
But India’s agriculture has been in decline in recent years and
growing at a far slower pace than the overall economy.
Economists say the country needs to boost agricultural growth sharply
to achieve the double-digit expansion needed to lift millions out of
deep poverty. Singh appealed to India’s scientific community to develop
new techniques to increase farm productivity.
“We will have to adopt modern means to be successful in agriculture,”
he said from the ramparts of the Mughal-era Red Fort in Delhi.
Singh’s words came as the country faced its worst drought since at
least 2002 with the annual monsoon rains that sweep the country from
June to September running at 29 percent below average.
New Delhi, Sunday, AFP |