Zusammenfassung der Ressource
National 5 Geography: The Green Revolution in India
- Advantages
- Crops are more resistant to disease
- More reliable harvests
- Increase in food production
- More people can be fed
- Higher yields mean lower prices
- Poorer people can afford more food
- Faster growing crops
- More harvests can be gathered
- More food
- Better off farmers can afford chemicals and machinery
- Become richer
- Employ more local people
- More jobs available in businesses supporting farming
- Disadvantages
- Not all farmers have felt the benefits
- Less well off farmers could not compete
- They sold their land and moved to the city
- Farmers borrowed money to buy crops
- They are now in debt
- Machinery has replaced people,
causing rural unemployment
- Chemicals have polluted local water supplies
- Irrigation has increased the
demand on drinking water
stores
- Some of the new
rice doesn't taste
as nice
- What is The Green Revolution?
- Introduced in the 1960's
- A method of securing food supplies for the growing population
- Reason for The Green Revolution
- Rapidly growing population to feed
- India cannot afford to import all of the food it needs
- Many people grow their own food
- Included the introduction of...
- Fertilisers and Pesticides
- Land Reform
- Irrigation Channels
- Machinery
- Tractors plough fields and harvest crops
- Improved infrastructure
- Aims
- Develop new types of rice that give higher yields
- Introduce irrigation schemes
- Use fertilisers to help crops grow
- Use pesticides to prevent disease