PRESERVING INDIA’S TRADITIONAL SEED VARIETIES

UPSC Relevance

GS-3: Agriculture – Indigenous Knowledge, Seed Diversity, MSP Frameworks

GS-3: Food Security – Crop Diversification, Sustainable Practices

GS-3: Environment – Climate Adaptation, Soil Conservation

Key Highlights

Decline of Traditional Seeds

India’s traditional seed varieties, once vital for food security and biodiversity, are disappearing.

Causes include:
  • Market preference for high-yield hybrids.
  • Government procurement favoring rice and wheat, marginalizing millets, pulses, and native seeds.
  • Seed industry focus on mass-produced hybrids, discouraging local preservation.
  • Drawbacks of Hybrid Seeds
Hybrids deliver high yields but:
  • Rely heavily on chemical fertilizers.
  • Require more water and are less resilient to climate shocks.
  • Compromise food quality and nutrition.
  • Traditional seeds, however, are climate-resilient, drought/flood-tolerant, and enhance soil health.
Policy Gaps
  • India’s agricultural policies prioritize productivity over diversity.
  • Initiatives like the Odisha Millet Mission show potential but lack national scale.
  • Research focuses on yield improvement, not diversity conservation.
Conservation Efforts

NGOs and conservatories like MSSRF’s Tribal Agro-biodiversity Centre in Odisha are:

  • Reviving traditional crops through community seed banks.
  • Engaging farmers in developing improved varieties.
  • Promoting climate-resilient farming systems.
Roadmap for Action
Government must:
  • Establish regional seed conservation centres.
  • Provide financial incentives and MSPs for traditional crops.
  • Integrate traditional varieties into midday meals, ration shops, and hospitals.
  • Support branding, processing, and marketing of indigenous produce.
Urgent Need
  1. Rising inputs, degrading soils, and frequent climate shocks demand action.
  2. Future food systems must prioritize:
  3. Diversity, climate resilience, and local roots.
  4. Nutrition, environmental health, and cultural preservation.
  5. A shift from high-yield to high-resilience agriculture is critical.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *