Context:
β’ In October 2025, stubble burning in Punjabβs major districts (Amritsar, Taran Taran, Ferozpur) recorded a five-year low.
β’ Early data suggest ~20% reduction in burnt area compared to 2024.
β’ Winter farm fires in Punjab historically peak in the first half of November, with potential surge expected.
Key Highlights:
- Area vs Fire Counts
β’ Government shares fire counts daily, but does not disclose actual burnt area.
β’ Burnt area measurement is crucial β determines pollution contribution, as farm fires have historically contributed up to 35% of Delhiβs winter PM2.5 load.
β’ Past discrepancies:
β 2023: 19.1 lakh hectares burnt (vs 15.4 lakh hectares in 2022)
β 2024: 19.4 lakh hectares β indicates fire counts under-reported actual burnt area, possibly due to timed burning after satellite passes. - 2025 Data (October 13β28)
β’ 2.46 lakh hectares burnt in the three districts (source: Suhora Technologies satellite analysis).
β’ Compared to 3.15 lakh hectares same period in 2024 β reduction ~20%.
β’ Reduction attributed to measures implemented over last five years, including mechanised harvesting, awareness campaigns, and stricter monitoring. - Factors Affecting 2025 Burn Pattern
β’ Delayed satellite imagery due to heavy rain & flooding in September, slowing harvesting.
β’ Early October harvest β data only available post-October 10.
β’ First fortnight of November still critical for potential peak fires.
Relevant Prelims Points:
β’ Major stubble burning districts: Amritsar, Taran Taran, Ferozpur.
β’ Historical contribution to Delhi winter pollution: up to 35% PM2.5.
β’ Monitoring challenge: fire counts vs actual burnt area.
β’ Satellite imagery & private firms (e.g., Suhora Technologies) provide critical verification.
Relevant Mains Points:
β’ Stubble burning β environmental & public health issue; affects air quality, climate, and agriculture sustainability.
β’ Measures to curb:
β PUSA decomposer & Happy Seeder technology
β Subsidies for mechanised straw management
β Awareness campaigns among farmers
β Policy enforcement + fines for non-compliance
β’ Way Forward:
β Real-time satellite monitoring β track actual burnt area
β Early interventions pre-November peak
β State-Centre coordination β ensure alternative straw disposal methods widely adopted.
UPSC Relevance (GS-wise):
β’ GS3 β Environment: Air Pollution, Agriculture, Climate Variability, Disaster Management.
β’ GS2 β Centre-State coordination, Policy Implementation.
