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

  • 1Classify primary activities and explain why they are directly dependent on natural resources
  • 2Distinguish between subsistence and commercial agriculture, and extensive vs intensive farming
  • 3Explain the characteristics, distribution, and significance of plantation agriculture
  • 4Describe the nature and global distribution of pastoral nomadism and commercial livestock rearing
  • 5Analyse the factors that influence the location of major agricultural regions of the world
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Why this chapter matters
Primary activities — gathering, pastoralism, fishing, forestry, mining, and especially agriculture — are a medium-weight CBSE topic with high analytical potential. Plantation agriculture vs subsistence farming, the Green Revolution, and crop-specific geography (wheat, rice, cotton) are board exam standards. The distinction between extensive and intensive agriculture and their global distribution is tested regularly.

Primary Activities

"Primary activities extract the earth's resources directly. Everything else depends on what is extracted."

1. Chapter Overview

PRIMARY ACTIVITIES are those that directly use the earth's resources: hunting and gathering, pastoralism (herding animals), agriculture (cultivating crops), mining, fishing, and forestry. This chapter focuses on AGRICULTURE — its types (subsistence vs. commercial, intensive vs. extensive, plantation), its global patterns, and the key crops that feed the world.


2. Types of Primary Activities

ActivityDescription
Hunting and GatheringThe OLDEST human activity. Now largely confined to remote areas (Amazon tribes, Kalahari Bushmen, some Andaman tribes).
Pastoralism (Nomadic Herding)Moving with animals along defined routes in search of pasture and water. Central Asia, Sahel, Horn of Africa.
AgricultureTHE dominant primary activity. Subsistence AND commercial.
MiningExtraction of minerals. Surface (open-pit) vs. underground.
FishingInland and marine.
ForestryLumbering. Amazon, Canada, Siberia.

3. Types of Agriculture

A. Subsistence Agriculture

  • Produce for FAMILY CONSUMPTION — not for sale
  • Primitive Subsistence (Shifting Cultivation) : Clear forest → burn → ash fertilises → farm 2-3 years → move on (fallow 15-25 years for forest regrowth). Regional names: JHUM/JHUMMING (NE India — Nagaland, Mizoram, Arunachal), MILPA (Mexico/Central America), LADANG (Malaysia/Indonesia/SE Asia), ROCA or CONUCO (Brazil/Amazon), CHITIMENE (Central Africa), TAUNGYA (Myanmar). Low productivity. Ecologically sound at low population densities — becomes unsustainable when fallow period is shortened.
  • Intensive Subsistence: VERY SMALL landholdings. LARGE labour input. HIGH yield per hectare (but LOW per person). Rice dominant in monsoon Asia (China, India, SE Asia). Wheat in drier areas.

B. Commercial Agriculture

  • Produce for the MARKET. Large scale. High capital and technology input. | Type | Characteristics | Where | |------|-----------------|-------| | Commercial Grain Farming | Extensive, mechanised. WHEAT. Large farms. Low labour — machines do the work. | Prairies (USA/Canada), Pampas (Argentina), Steppes (Russia/Ukraine), Downs (Australia) | | Mixed Farming | Crops + livestock on the same farm. Crop rotation maintains soil fertility. | NW Europe, NE USA, New Zealand | | Plantation Agriculture | LARGE estates producing a SINGLE cash crop. Capital intensive. Needs processing nearby. | Tea (India, Sri Lanka), Coffee (Brazil, Colombia), Rubber (Malaysia, Indonesia), Sugarcane, Banana | | Mediterranean Agriculture | Specialised. Olives, grapes (wine), citrus fruits, figs. Winter rain, summer DRY. | Mediterranean basin, California, Chile, South Africa, SW Australia | | Market Gardening / Truck Farming | Vegetables, fruits, flowers for URBAN markets. Close to cities. High-value, perishable crops. | Peri-urban areas worldwide |

4. Major Crops and Their Regions

CropTypeMajor Producers
RiceStaple grain. Hot, humid.China, India, Indonesia, Bangladesh, Vietnam
WheatStaple grain. Temperate.China, India, Russia, USA, France
Maize (Corn)Feed + food.USA, China, Brazil
CottonFibre. Warm. 200 frost-free days.India, China, USA, Pakistan
SugarcaneTropical.Brazil, India, China, Thailand
TeaPlantation. Warm, humid, well-drained slopes.India, China, Sri Lanka, Kenya
CoffeePlantation. Tropical highlands.Brazil, Vietnam, Colombia, India
RubberPlantation. Equatorial.Thailand, Indonesia, Malaysia, India (Kerala)

5. The Green Revolution

The Green Revolution (1960s–70s) introduced a package of agricultural technologies that transformed food production in developing countries.

Components

  • High Yielding Variety (HYV) seeds: Dwarf wheat varieties (Norman Borlaug, Mexico) and rice varieties (IR-8, IRRI Philippines). Introduced in India by M.S. Swaminathan.
  • Irrigation: HYV seeds need 2–3x more water than traditional varieties. Expansion of tubewell and canal irrigation.
  • Chemical fertilisers: Nitrogen fertilisers dramatically increase yield of HYV varieties.
  • Pesticides: Protect uniform HYV crops from pests.

Achievements

  • India's wheat production: 11 million tonnes (1965) → 74 million tonnes (2022)
  • India became food self-sufficient; ended dependence on US PL480 food aid
  • Famine prevention: no major famine in India since the late 1960s

Limitations

  • Regional inequality: Benefits concentrated in Punjab, Haryana, western UP (flat, irrigated). Eastern India and dryland areas largely bypassed.
  • Groundwater depletion: Punjab/Haryana water table falling 0.5–1 m/year from tubewell extraction.
  • Soil degradation: Heavy chemical use over decades reduced organic matter and soil health.
  • Loss of crop diversity: HYV monocultures replaced thousands of traditional varieties.
  • Health concerns: Pesticide contamination; Punjab's 'cancer belt' linked to chemical exposure.

6. Mining

Surface (Open-Pit) Mining

  • Used when minerals are near the surface. Cheapest, but most ENVIRONMENTALLY DESTRUCTIVE.

Underground (Shaft) Mining

  • Deep deposits. Expensive. Dangerous.

Major Mining Regions

  • Iron ore: Australia, Brazil, China, India (Odisha, Jharkhand)
  • Coal: China, India, USA, Australia
  • Petroleum: USA, Saudi Arabia, Russia, Canada (Middle East: ~50% of reserves)
  • Gold: China, Australia, Russia, South Africa
  • Diamonds: Russia, Botswana, DR Congo, Australia

7. Exam Focus

  1. Types of agriculture — subsistence (shifting, intensive) vs commercial (grain, mixed, plantation, Mediterranean)
  2. Shifting cultivation names — JHUM (NE India), MILPA (Mexico), LADANG (SE Asia), ROCA (Brazil). PROCESS (clear → burn → farm 2-3 years → move on).
  3. Plantation agriculture — single crop, large estate, tropical, export. Tea, coffee, rubber.
  4. Green Revolution — HYV seeds + irrigation + fertiliser + pesticide. M.S. Swaminathan. Punjab/Haryana beneficiary. Groundwater depletion = key limitation.
  5. Crops and producers — rice (China/India/SE Asia), wheat (China/India/Russia/USA), cotton (India/China/USA)
  6. Mining regions for iron ore (Brazil/Australia/India), coal (China/India/USA), petroleum (Middle East/Russia/USA)

8. Conclusion

Primary activities are the FOUNDATION of the economy:

  • GATHERING (the oldest) to MEDITERRANEAN AGRICULTURE (the most specialised)
  • SHIFTING CULTIVATION in the forests. WHEAT on the prairies. TEA on the slopes. COFFEE on the tropical highlands.
  • MINING extracts the minerals that feed the factories. Iron ore (Australia, Brazil, India). Coal (China, India). Petroleum (Middle East).

'The world eats because someone, somewhere, planted a seed — and harvested it.'

Key formulas & results

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

Types of Agriculture — Classification
PRIMARY ACTIVITIES: Activities directly dependent on natural resources — agriculture, animal husbandry, fishing, forestry, mining. AGRICULTURE CLASSIFICATION: BY SCALE AND PURPOSE: SUBSISTENCE AGRICULTURE: produce for own consumption. SUBSISTENCE TYPES: (a) Primitive/Shifting Cultivation: Slash and burn; known by different names — JHUM (India's Northeast), MILPA (Mexico/Central America), LADANG (Southeast Asia), ROCA (Brazil). Plots cultivated 2–3 years then abandoned; forest regrows. (b) INTENSIVE SUBSISTENCE: high labour input on small plots; wet rice cultivation in South and Southeast Asia; high yields from small land. COMMERCIAL AGRICULTURE: produce for sale. Large scale, mechanised, chemical inputs. BY LAND USE INTENSITY: EXTENSIVE AGRICULTURE: large land holdings, fewer inputs per hectare, lower yield per hectare but high yield per worker. Grain farming in USA/Canada/Australia. INTENSIVE AGRICULTURE: small land holdings, high inputs (labour or capital), high yield per hectare. Rice cultivation in Asia, market gardening near cities.
The most important typology for CBSE: Primitive subsistence (shifting cultivation) → Intensive subsistence (wet rice, South Asia) → Commercial (plantation, grain, mixed farming). Know the names for shifting cultivation: Jhum (NE India), Milpa (Mexico), Ladang (SE Asia), Roca (Brazil). These names appear in 1-mark fill-in-the-blank questions.
Plantation Agriculture
PLANTATION AGRICULTURE: large estates growing a SINGLE CROP (monoculture) for export. CHARACTERISTICS: Large land area (hundreds to thousands of hectares). Capital-intensive (machinery, processing facilities). Labour-intensive (historically used bonded/slave labour; now paid labour). Monoculture (one crop per estate). Located in TROPICAL regions (colonial origin). Processing facilities on-site (tea factory, sugar mill). Crops and regions: TEA: Assam/West Bengal (India), Sri Lanka (Ceylon tea), Kenya, Darjeeling. RUBBER: Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand. COFFEE: Brazil (world's largest), Ethiopia, Colombia. SUGARCANE: Brazil (ethanol), India, Caribbean. COCOA: Ivory Coast, Ghana, Nigeria. COTTON: USA, Egypt. JUTE: Bangladesh (Bengal delta). BANANAS: Central America (multinational corporations — United Fruit Company historically). HISTORICAL CONTEXT: Plantation agriculture was a product of EUROPEAN COLONIALISM — colonisers took tropical land, introduced cash crops, and used enslaved or indentured labour for European markets.
For CBSE: know (1) definition of plantation agriculture, (2) two characteristics (large estate, monoculture, tropical, export-oriented), (3) three crop-region pairs. Tea-Assam, Rubber-Malaysia, Coffee-Brazil are the most tested examples.
Commercial Grain Farming and Mixed Farming
COMMERCIAL GRAIN FARMING: Extensive; mechanised; temperate grasslands. Location: Interior of North America (Prairies/Wheat Belt), interior of South America (Pampas — Argentina), interior of Australia (Murray-Darling basin), interior of Russia/Ukraine (Steppes — 'Breadbasket of Europe'). Crops: WHEAT (main temperate crop), MAIZE/CORN (USA Corn Belt), BARLEY, OATS. Characteristics: Large farms (hundreds of hectares per farm). Mechanised (combine harvesters, tractors). One family operates a large farm. High yield per worker, lower yield per hectare (compared to intensive Asian rice). MIXED FARMING: combination of crop cultivation and livestock rearing. Very common in Western Europe and eastern North America. Crops: feed crops (hay, maize) + cash crops. Livestock: dairy cattle, pigs, sheep. Reason: rotational farming improves soil; livestock provide manure. DAIRY FARMING: concentrated near urban centres (perishable product). Northwestern Europe (Netherlands, Denmark) world leaders. USA: Wisconsin, California. India: Punjab, Haryana (Operation Flood/White Revolution launched by Verghese Kurien, NDDB, Anand).
COMMERCIAL GRAIN FARMING: the Prairies (North America), Pampas (South America), Steppes (Russia/Ukraine/Kazakhstan), and Murray-Darling (Australia) are the world's 'breadbaskets.' Ukraine/Russia wheat crisis (2022 following the invasion) showed the geopolitical importance of these temperate grain-growing regions.
Gathering, Fishing, and Mining
GATHERING: Oldest human economic activity. Today: found in tundra (berries, lichens), tropical forests (roots, fruits), mountain areas. Very low intensity. Examples: Indigenous communities in Amazon, Siberia. FISHING: INLAND FISHING: rivers, lakes, reservoirs. MARINE FISHING: coastal (artisanal — small boats, nets) and deep-sea (commercial trawlers). MAJOR FISHING NATIONS: China (world's largest), Japan, Norway, Canada, USA, India. GRAND BANKS (off Newfoundland), DOGGER BANK (North Sea), NORTH SEA — world's most productive fishing grounds. AQUACULTURE: fish farming. China dominates. MINING: Extraction of minerals from the earth. Open-cast/surface mining vs underground mining. ENERGY MINERALS: coal, petroleum, natural gas. METALLIC MINERALS: iron ore, copper, gold, bauxite. NON-METALLIC: limestone, salt, mica, gypsum. MINING REGIONS: Coal: USA (Appalachians), China, Australia. Iron ore: Brazil, Australia, India, China. Copper: Chile (world's largest). Petroleum: Middle East, Russia, USA, Venezuela.
Fishing questions often link to ocean currents — cold and warm current meeting zones (like the Grand Banks) are highly productive because nutrient upwelling supports plankton. Mining questions link to India's mineral resources (separate chapter). Know that China is the world's largest fishery nation and the world's largest consumer of most minerals.
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Common mistakes & fixes

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

WATCH OUT
Saying primitive subsistence agriculture is practised by 'backward' or 'uncivilised' people
Primitive/shifting cultivation is ecologically SOPHISTICATED — the cycle of cultivation and forest regeneration maintains soil fertility without chemical inputs, something modern industrial agriculture struggles to do. It is practised by indigenous communities who have developed detailed knowledge of local plant varieties and ecological cycles over centuries. It is called 'primitive' in the sense of being early/pre-industrial, not in the sense of being inferior. CBSE answers should describe it as: indigenous/tribal communities practising shifting cultivation in tropical forest areas — not use derogatory language.
WATCH OUT
Confusing plantation agriculture with commercial grain farming
PLANTATION agriculture: TROPICAL regions, single cash crop for export (tea, rubber, coffee, cocoa), large estates, labour-intensive, historically colonial. COMMERCIAL GRAIN FARMING: TEMPERATE regions (Prairies, Steppes, Pampas), staple crops (wheat, corn), family farms, highly mechanised, extensive. The key contrast: plantation = tropical + labour-intensive + monoculture cash crop. Commercial grain = temperate + capital/machine-intensive + staple food crops.

Practice problems

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

Q1EASY· shifting-cultivation
What is shifting cultivation? By what names is it known in different parts of the world?
Show solution
SHIFTING CULTIVATION (also called Primitive Subsistence Agriculture / Slash-and-Burn): A type of subsistence agriculture practised in tropical forests where: (1) A patch of forest is CLEARED by cutting and burning vegetation (slash-and-burn). (2) The cleared land is CULTIVATED for 2–3 years. (3) When soil fertility DECLINES, the plot is ABANDONED and left to forest regrowth, and the farmer moves to a new patch. (4) The abandoned plot may be returned to after 15–25 years when the forest has regenerated. CROPS: Mixed — subsistence food crops like maize, yam, cassava, rice, millet depending on region. REGIONAL NAMES: JHUM or JHUMMING: Northeast India (Nagaland, Mizoram, Arunachal Pradesh). MILPA: Mexico and Central America. LADANG: Malaysia, Indonesia, Philippines, and Southeast Asia. ROCA or CONUCO: Brazil and Amazon region. CHITIMENE or TAUNGYA: Central Africa and Myanmar. SIGNIFICANCE: Practised by tribal/indigenous communities. Ecologically sound when population density is low (sufficient fallow period for forest regrowth). Becomes UNSUSTAINABLE when fallow periods are shortened due to population pressure — leading to permanent deforestation.
Q2MEDIUM· plantation-agriculture
Describe the main characteristics of plantation agriculture. Why did it develop in tropical regions?
Show solution
PLANTATION AGRICULTURE: A form of commercial agriculture where large estates grow a SINGLE CASH CROP for export, typically using external capital and hired labour. CHARACTERISTICS: (1) LARGE LAND AREA: Plantations cover hundreds to thousands of hectares — far larger than family farms. A single rubber or tea estate may cover 2,000–5,000 hectares. (2) MONOCULTURE: Only one crop is cultivated — tea, rubber, coffee, sugarcane, cocoa, bananas, etc. This maximises efficiency in planting, harvesting, and processing but risks devastation if prices crash or disease strikes (e.g., banana Panama disease). (3) CAPITAL INTENSIVE: On-site processing facilities (tea factory, rubber-processing plant, sugar mill). Heavy machinery for irrigation, harvesting. (4) EXPORT ORIENTATION: The crop is grown not for local consumption but for export to developed country markets. (5) HIRED/BONDED LABOUR: Historically used enslaved Africans (Caribbean sugar), indentured Indian workers (Assam tea, Fiji sugarcane), or colonial forced labour. Today: paid (but often very low-wage) local labour. WHY TROPICAL REGIONS: (1) COLONIAL HISTORY: European colonists found tropical land available (through conquest, displacement of indigenous peoples) and tropical climates suitable for cash crops their home markets demanded (tea, coffee, rubber, spices — not producible in temperate Europe). (2) CROP REQUIREMENTS: Tea, rubber, coffee, cocoa, and bananas all need tropical climate (high temperatures, high rainfall, no frost). (3) LABOUR: Large indigenous or imported labour populations available at low cost in colonial tropical territories. EXAMPLES: Tea: Assam/Darjeeling (India), Sri Lanka, Kenya. Rubber: Malaysia, Indonesia. Coffee: Brazil (world's largest), Ethiopia. Cocoa: Ivory Coast, Ghana.
Q3HARD· green-revolution
What was the Green Revolution? Discuss its achievements and limitations in the context of Indian agriculture.
Show solution
THE GREEN REVOLUTION: A set of agricultural innovations introduced in developing countries (India, Mexico, Philippines) in the 1960s–1970s that dramatically increased food production. CORE ELEMENTS: (1) HIGH-YIELDING VARIETY (HYV) SEEDS: New dwarf varieties of wheat (Norman Borlaug's 'Sonora 64' and related varieties, introduced to India by M.S. Swaminathan) and rice (IR-8 'Miracle Rice' from IRRI). Dwarf varieties don't fall over when they produce heavy grain heads. (2) IRRIGATION: HYV seeds require more water than traditional varieties — expansion of tubewell and canal irrigation (Punjab's canal system, groundwater extraction). (3) CHEMICAL FERTILISERS: HYV varieties respond to nitrogen fertiliser with large yield increases; traditional varieties don't. (4) PESTICIDES: To protect the uniform HYV crops from pests. ACHIEVEMENTS: (1) FOOD SECURITY: India went from food deficit (importing wheat from USA under PL480 in the 1960s) to food self-sufficiency and later food exporter. Wheat production: 11 million tonnes (1965) → 74 million tonnes (2022). (2) FAMINE PREVENTION: The 1960s famines (Bihar 1966-67) were the last major Indian famines — the Green Revolution's yield increases made famine highly unlikely. (3) POVERTY REDUCTION: Higher agricultural incomes in Punjab, Haryana, and western UP transformed these states. (4) MODEL FOR GLOBAL AGRICULTURE: India's success inspired Green Revolutions in Mexico, Philippines, Bangladesh, Indonesia. LIMITATIONS: (1) REGIONAL INEQUALITY: Green Revolution concentrated in irrigated, flat plains (Punjab, Haryana, western UP) and largely bypassed eastern India, rainfed dryland farming areas, and tribal regions. Created 'two Indias' in agriculture. (2) GROUNDWATER DEPLETION: Intensive irrigation (tubewell) drained Punjab/Haryana groundwater. Water table has fallen 0.5–1m per year in some districts — threatening the very irrigation that makes Green Revolution farming possible. (3) SOIL DEGRADATION: Heavy chemical fertiliser and pesticide use over decades has reduced soil organic matter, created saline soils, and killed soil microbiome. (4) LOSS OF CROP DIVERSITY: HYV monocultures replaced thousands of local rice and wheat varieties, reducing genetic diversity (a risk if a new disease strikes HYV crops). (5) HEALTH CONCERNS: Pesticide contamination of food and water; Punjab's 'cancer belt' has elevated cancer rates attributed partly to pesticide exposure. (6) ECONOMIC INEQUALITY WITHIN VILLAGES: Green Revolution benefited large landholders who could afford irrigation, seeds, and fertiliser more than small farmers. CURRENT CHALLENGES: Second Green Revolution focus: extending yield gains to pulses, oilseeds, and eastern India. Sustainable intensification: maintaining yields while reducing chemical inputs (natural farming, zero-budget natural farming). Climate resilience: developing drought-tolerant, flood-tolerant HYV varieties.

5-minute revision

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

  • Primary activities: directly dependent on nature — agriculture, fishing, forestry, mining, animal husbandry.
  • Subsistence agriculture: for own use. Commercial agriculture: for sale/export.
  • Shifting cultivation: slash-and-burn, 2-3 year cultivation, then fallow. JHUM (NE India), MILPA (Mexico), LADANG (SE Asia), ROCA (Brazil).
  • Intensive subsistence: wet rice in South/Southeast Asia, high labour, high yield/hectare.
  • Plantation: large estate, monoculture, tropical, export. Tea-Assam, Rubber-Malaysia, Coffee-Brazil.
  • Commercial grain: temperate grasslands, mechanised. Prairies (wheat/maize), Pampas (wheat), Steppes (wheat).
  • Green Revolution: HYV seeds + irrigation + fertiliser + pesticides. M.S. Swaminathan (India). Punjab/Haryana main beneficiary.
  • Green Revolution limitations: regional inequality, groundwater depletion, soil degradation, loss of crop diversity.
  • World's largest fishing nation: China. Major fishing grounds: Grand Banks, North Sea, Dogger Bank.
  • Mining: coal (China/USA), iron ore (Brazil/Australia/India), copper (Chile), petroleum (Middle East).

CBSE marks blueprint

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

Typical chapter weightage: 5-8 marks

Question typeMarks eachTypical countWhat it tests
Short Answer — Types/Concepts31Shifting cultivation names; plantation agriculture characteristics; define subsistence vs commercial; types of fishing
Long Answer — Analysis51Green Revolution achievements and limitations; plantation agriculture and colonial history; global distribution of wheat/rice farming; commercial grain farming vs plantation
Prep strategy
  • Shifting cultivation names: JHUM (NE India), MILPA (Mexico), LADANG (SE Asia), ROCA (Brazil). Tested as fill-in-the-blank in 1-mark questions.
  • Plantation crops + regions: Tea (Assam/Sri Lanka/Kenya), Rubber (Malaysia/Indonesia), Coffee (Brazil), Cocoa (Ivory Coast), Sugarcane (Brazil/India). Minimum 4 pairs.
  • Green Revolution: M.S. Swaminathan (India) + Norman Borlaug (Mexico). HYV seeds + irrigation + fertiliser + pesticides. Punjab/Haryana success. Groundwater depletion as the key limitation.

Where this shows up in the real world

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

Ukraine War and Global Food Security — Commercial Grain Farming's Geopolitical Role

Russia and Ukraine together supplied ~30% of global wheat exports before Russia's invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. The Black Sea blockade of Ukrainian wheat exports triggered food price spikes across the Middle East, North Africa, and Sub-Saharan Africa — countries heavily dependent on Ukrainian/Russian wheat imports. Egypt imports ~80% of its wheat from this region; Lebanon, Sudan, and Yemen were severely affected. The crisis showed that the world's commercial grain belts (Steppes, Prairies, Pampas, Murray-Darling) are not just economic assets but geopolitical weapons. India responded by briefly banning wheat exports to protect domestic prices — but later restrictions exposed the tension between food security and export economics.

Exam strategy

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

  1. For 'distinguish between X and Y' questions on agriculture types: always use a two-column table format (or clearly structured paragraphs) covering: definition, location/region, scale, technology level, and purpose. This systematic approach earns full marks.
  2. For Green Revolution: structure as background (food shortage in 1960s India) → components (HYV + irrigation + fertiliser + pesticide) → achievements (self-sufficiency, famine prevention) → limitations (groundwater, regional inequality, soil degradation). This four-part structure works for 5-mark answers.

Going beyond the textbook

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

  • Read AMARTYA SEN's 'Poverty and Famines' (1981) — which demonstrated through historical evidence (1943 Bengal Famine, Bangladesh 1974, Ethiopia 1973) that famines are not caused by food shortage but by ENTITLEMENT FAILURE — poor people's inability to access food due to income loss, price spikes, or political exclusion. This framework explains why the Green Revolution (increasing food supply) reduced famine risk — but also why hunger persists in India despite food surplus (poor people lack purchasing power to buy food that exists)
  • Study the SECOND GREEN REVOLUTION debate in India — 2022 onwards. After the first Green Revolution plateaued in yield gains and created environmental problems (groundwater depletion in Punjab has entered a crisis phase — CGWB estimates Punjab's water table is falling 0.5–1m per year and will become unusable for irrigation by 2040 in some districts), India is trying to shift toward: climate-resilient crops, natural farming (PM's 'zero budget natural farming'), pulses and oilseeds revolution, and diversification away from wheat-rice monoculture in Punjab/Haryana

Where else this chapter is tested

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

CBSE Class 12 Board (Geography)High
UPSC Prelims (Agriculture, Food Security)High
CUET (Geography)Medium

Questions students ask

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

Wet rice cultivation — the dominant form of intensive subsistence agriculture — is concentrated in South and Southeast Asia because of THREE CONVERGING FACTORS: (1) MONSOON CLIMATE: Abundant seasonal rainfall (1,500–2,500mm) provides the water rice needs. River delta flooding replenishes soil nutrients. (2) HIGH POPULATION DENSITY: The region has among the world's highest rural densities — more labour available per hectare than anywhere else, making labour-intensive rice cultivation economically viable. Rice yields of 4–8 tonnes/hectare require hundreds of hours of transplanting, weeding, and harvesting per hectare — feasible only where labour is abundant. (3) HISTORICAL AND CULTURAL: Rice has been cultivated in Asia for 7,000–10,000 years. Irrigation infrastructure (paddies, bunds, canals) built over millennia, social systems (cooperative irrigation societies), and cuisine preferences (rice as the staple food) all reinforce rice cultivation. In contrast, wheat farming (grain that can be mechanised) developed in temperate regions with labour-scarce conditions, leading to extensive farming rather than intensive.
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Last reviewed on 27 May 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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