Major Crops of India – UPSC Study Material

Major Crops of India – Legacy IAS | UPSC Study Material
🏛️ Legacy IAS – Bangalore

Major Types of Crops in India

Kharif · Rabi · Zaid · Major Food & Cash Crops · Current Affairs · PYQs · MCQs

📋 GS Paper I & III 🌾 Prelims + Mains 📰 Updated 2025–26 🏅 Record 353.96 MT (2024–25) ✍️ 3 Mock Mains ✅ 5 Practice MCQs
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UPSC Relevance Cropping seasons and major crops appear in GS Paper I (Geography) and GS Paper III (Agriculture, Food Security). High-frequency Prelims topic — expect 2–3 MCQs on crop classification, producing states, and seasonal characteristics. Mains links to food security, Green Revolution, doubling farmers' income, and climate-smart agriculture.

1. Cropping Seasons in India — Overview

India's diverse agro-climatic conditions support three distinct cropping seasons. Each season has its own set of crops, climate requirements, sowing and harvesting periods, and water needs — shaped by the monsoon cycle.

353.96 MT
Record foodgrain production 2024–25
3
Major cropping seasons: Kharif, Rabi, Zaid
~2/3
India's population engaged in agriculture
127.6 M ha
Total foodgrain cropped area
Kharif
Arabic: "Autumn" — monsoon season crops
Rabi
Arabic: "Spring" — winter season crops
India's Three Cropping Seasons — Annual Agricultural Calendar 🌧️ KHARIF (Monsoon) Sow: June–July | Harvest: Sep–Oct Rice · Maize · Cotton · Bajra · Jowar Groundnut · Soybean · Sugarcane Hot & humid; monsoon-dependent ❄️ RABI (Winter) Sow: Oct–Dec | Harvest: Apr–Jun Wheat · Barley · Mustard · Gram Peas · Lentils · Oats · Linseed Cool & dry; irrigation-dependent ☀️ ZAID (Summer) Sow: March–June | Between seasons Watermelon · Muskmelon · Cucumber Moong · Fodder crops · Pumpkin Hot & dry; short-duration; drought-resistant
Figure 1: India's three cropping seasons — Kharif (monsoon), Rabi (winter), and Zaid (summer filler crops)
Word Origins: Both "Kharif" and "Rabi" are Arabic words — Kharif means "Autumn" and Rabi means "Spring," reflecting the Arab influence on Indian agricultural terminology. The terms are also used in Pakistan and Bangladesh. Zaid is the short summer inter-season between Rabi and Kharif.

2. Kharif Crops — Monsoon Season

🌧️ Kharif — The Monsoon Crop Season

Sown: June–July Harvested: Sep–Oct Rainfall: 100–150 cm needed Temperature: Hot & humid Duration: 90–150 days

Kharif crops are sown at the onset of the southwest monsoon (June–July) and harvested when rains withdraw (September–October). They require hot, humid conditions and substantial rainfall, making them heavily dependent on monsoon performance. Too much or too little rain directly affects yields. Key states: Assam, West Bengal, Odisha, Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Tamil Nadu, Kerala, and Maharashtra.

🌾 Key Characteristics

  • Sowing: June–July with onset of SW monsoon
  • Harvesting: September–October (autumn)
  • Climate: Hot and humid conditions (27–35°C)
  • Rainfall: 100–150 cm; highly monsoon-dependent
  • Soil: Loamy or alluvial soils that retain moisture well
  • Duration: 90–150 days depending on crop
  • Nutrients: High nitrogen requirement for rapid growth
  • Pest pressure: Higher due to humid conditions

🌱 Major Kharif Crops

  • Cereals: Rice, Maize, Jowar (Sorghum), Bajra (Pearl Millet)
  • Pulses: Green Gram (Moong), Black Gram (Urad), Pigeon Pea (Toor/Arhar)
  • Oilseeds: Soybean, Groundnut (Peanut), Sunflower, Sesame
  • Fiber: Cotton, Jute
  • Cash crops: Sugarcane, Turmeric
  • Vegetables: Okra (Ladyfinger), Brinjal, Bitter Gourd
  • Fruits: Banana, Mango, Watermelon
2024–25 Kharif Production (2nd Advance Estimates): Kharif foodgrain production reached 1,663.91 lakh tonnes (166.39 MT). Kharif Rice set a record at 1,206.79 lakh tonnes (120.68 MT) — up 74.20 LMT from 2023–24. Kharif Maize: 248.11 LMT. Kharif Millets (Shree Anna): 137.52 LMT. Kharif Groundnut: 104.26 LMT (up 17.66 LMT). Kharif Soybean: 151.32 LMT (up 20.70 LMT).
💡 Mnemonic — Key Kharif Crops (RMCBGST)
Rice · Maize · Cotton · Bajra · Groundnut · Soybean · Toor (Arhar)
Remember: "Real Monsoons Create Big Green Soybean Terraces"

3. Rabi Crops — Winter Season

❄️ Rabi — The Winter Crop Season

Sown: Oct–Dec (post-monsoon) Harvested: Apr–Jun (spring) Temp: 15–20°C ideal Less water than Kharif Duration: 120–180 days

Rabi crops are sown after the monsoon rains cease (October–December) and harvested during the spring (April–June). They thrive in cooler temperatures and are largely dependent on irrigation rather than rainfall. Success of the Green Revolution was especially seen in Rabi crops — particularly wheat in Punjab, Haryana, and western UP. Key states: Punjab, Haryana, HP, J&K, Uttarakhand, and Uttar Pradesh.

🌾 Key Characteristics

  • Sowing: October–December (after monsoon withdrawal)
  • Harvesting: April–June (spring/early summer)
  • Climate: Cool temperatures; 10–15°C at sowing; 21–26°C at harvest
  • Water: Less rain-dependent; requires irrigation; 75–100 cm
  • Soil: Well-drained fertile loamy and clayey loamy soils
  • Duration: 120–180 days (longer than Kharif)
  • Nutrients: Balanced — phosphorus and potassium for root and grain
  • Pest pressure: Lower, but susceptible to certain winter diseases

🌱 Major Rabi Crops

  • Cereals: Wheat, Barley, Oats
  • Pulses: Chickpea (Gram/Chana), Lentils (Masoor), Peas, Horse Gram (Kulthi)
  • Oilseeds: Mustard (Rapeseed), Linseed, Sunflower
  • Vegetables: Potato, Onion, Garlic, Carrot, Cauliflower, Cabbage, Spinach, Peas
  • Spices: Cumin, Coriander, Fenugreek
  • Other: Isabgol (Psyllium), Alfalfa (fodder)
  • Fruit: Strawberry
2024–25 Rabi Production (2nd Advance Estimates): Rabi foodgrain production (excl. summer): 1,645.27 lakh tonnes (164.53 MT). Wheat hit a record 1,154.30 lakh tonnes (115.43 MT) — up 21.38 LMT from 2023–24. Rabi Rice: 157.58 LMT. Rabi Millets (Shree Anna): 30.81 LMT. Gram (Chickpea): 115.35 LMT. Lentil: 18.17 LMT. Rapeseed & Mustard: 128.73 LMT.
💡 Mnemonic — Key Rabi Crops (WBMCPG)
Wheat · Barley · Mustard · Chickpea (Gram) · Peas · Garlic/Onion
Remember: "Winter Brings Many Cool Pea Gardens"

4. Zaid Crops — Summer Inter-Season

☀️ Zaid — The Summer Filler Season

Grown: March–June Between Rabi & Kharif Short duration: 60–90 days Drought-tolerant Long daylight hours needed

Zaid crops are short-duration summer crops grown between the Rabi and Kharif seasons (March–June). They are called "filler crops" as they maximise land use during the inter-season. They require longer daylight hours for flowering, are drought-resistant, and need less water. Mostly grown in regions with adequate irrigation (northern and north-western states). Leguminous Zaid crops also improve soil fertility by fixing nitrogen.

🌾 Key Characteristics

  • Season: March to June (between Rabi and Kharif)
  • Duration: Short — 60 to 90 days (rapid growth cycle)
  • Climate: Hot and dry conditions; require long daylight hours
  • Water: Less water than both Kharif and Rabi; drought-tolerant
  • Pest pressure: Lower due to dry summer conditions
  • Soil benefit: Leguminous varieties fix nitrogen — improve soil health
  • Purpose: Maximise cropping intensity; ensure year-round income
  • Key states: Northern and north-western states with irrigation

🌱 Major Zaid Crops

  • Fruits/Cucurbits: Watermelon, Muskmelon, Cucumber, Bitter Gourd, Pumpkin, Bottle Gourd
  • Vegetables: Okra (Ladyfinger), Brinjal, Tomato
  • Pulses: Green Gram (Moong), Black Gram (Urad), Pigeon Pea (Arhar)
  • Fodder: Guar (Cluster Beans), Cowpea, Maize (fodder variety)
  • Cash crops: Sugarcane (ratoon crop)
  • Note: Moong and Urad are grown in all three seasons
Significance of Zaid Crops for UPSC: Zaid crops are important for: (1) Crop diversification and cropping intensity; (2) Nutritional security — cucurbits and vegetables are vitamin-rich; (3) Soil health — leguminous Zaid crops fix atmospheric nitrogen, reducing fertiliser need; (4) Year-round farmer income — prevents a 3-month income gap between Rabi harvest and Kharif sowing; (5) Water conservation — drought-tolerant varieties ideal for water-scarce regions.

5. Kharif vs Rabi vs Zaid — Complete Comparison

Feature🌧️ Kharif❄️ Rabi☀️ Zaid
Season name Monsoon / Autumn Winter / Spring Summer / Inter-season
Sowing period June–July (onset of monsoon) October–December (post-monsoon) March–June (between Rabi & Kharif)
Harvesting September–October April–June June–July (before Kharif sowing)
Temperature Hot & humid; 27–35°C Cool; 10–15°C (sowing); 21–26°C (harvest) Hot & dry; 30–40°C
Water dependency High — monsoon-dependent (100–150 cm) Moderate — irrigation-dependent (75–100 cm) Low — drought-resistant; less water
Duration 90–150 days 120–180 days (longer) 60–90 days (shortest)
Key crops Rice, Maize, Cotton, Bajra, Groundnut, Soybean, Jowar Wheat, Barley, Mustard, Gram, Peas, Lentils Watermelon, Muskmelon, Cucumber, Moong, Guar
Major states Assam, WB, Odisha, AP, Telangana, TN, Kerala, Maharashtra Punjab, Haryana, HP, J&K, Uttarakhand, UP Northern and north-western irrigated states
Pest pressure High (humid conditions) Moderate (winter diseases) Low (dry conditions)
Nutrients needed High nitrogen (rapid growth) Balanced P & K (root and grain filling) Moderate; legumes fix own N
Trick for UPSC MCQs — Crop Classification:
Rice: Kharif (primarily); also grown as Rabi rice in some regions and as a summer crop
Maize: Primarily Kharif; but also a Rabi crop in parts of Bihar and some states
Sugarcane: Long-duration annual crop (10–12 months) — often listed under both Kharif and Zaid; planted Feb–March, harvested Oct–Nov
Moong & Urad: Grown in all three seasons (Kharif, Rabi, and Zaid) — do not assume they belong to only one season
Onion: Primarily Rabi crop; but a Kharif variety also exists in some regions

6. Major Food & Cash Crops of India

Major crops can be classified into: Food crops (Rice, Wheat, Millets, Maize, Pulses) and Cash crops (Sugarcane, Cotton, Jute, Oilseeds, Tea, Coffee, Rubber).

🍚 Rice (Paddy)

Kharif (primary) Record 120.68 MT (2024–25) India = World #2 producer
  • Temp: 22–32°C; high humidity
  • Rainfall: 150–300 cm
  • Soil: Deep clayey and loamy
  • Top states: Telangana > UP > WB > Punjab > Chhattisgarh (2023–24 data; WB traditionally led by area)
  • Note: Aus, Aman, Boro — 3 crops/year in Assam, WB, Odisha
  • Global: 2nd largest producer after China

🌾 Wheat

Rabi Record 115.43 MT (2024–25) India = World #2 producer
  • Temp: 10–15°C (sowing); 21–26°C (harvest)
  • Rainfall: 75–100 cm; bright sunlight at harvest
  • Soil: Well-drained fertile loamy and clayey loamy
  • Top states: UP > MP > Punjab > Haryana > Rajasthan (2023–24 Final Estimates)
  • Note: Green Revolution's biggest success crop
  • Global: 2nd largest producer after China

🌽 Millets (Shree Anna / Nutri-Cereals)

Kharif (primary) 2023 = International Year of Millets
  • Temp: 27–32°C
  • Rainfall: 50–100 cm (drought-tolerant)
  • Soil: Inferior alluvial or loamy (hardy crops)
  • Top states: Rajasthan > Karnataka > Maharashtra > MP > UP
  • Types: Jowar (Sorghum), Bajra (Pearl Millet), Ragi (Finger Millet)
  • Ragi: Rich in iron, calcium, micronutrients; grown in red/black soils

🌽 Maize

Kharif (primary) India = World #7 producer
  • Temp: 21–27°C
  • Rainfall: High rainfall; old alluvial soil
  • Soil: Old alluvial soil; well-drained
  • Top states: MP > Karnataka > Maharashtra > Bihar > Telangana (2024–25 data)
  • Note: Used as food and fodder; growing biofuel use
  • 2024–25: Kharif Maize: 248.11 LMT (record)

🫘 Pulses

Kharif + Rabi + Zaid India = World #1 producer & consumer
  • Temp: 20–27°C; Rainfall: 25–60 cm
  • Soil: Sandy-loamy soil
  • Top states: MP > Rajasthan > Maharashtra > UP > Karnataka
  • Types: Tur (Arhar), Urad, Moong, Masur, Gram, Peas
  • Note: Leguminous crops fix nitrogen — restore soil fertility
  • Exception: Arhar (Tur) does NOT fix nitrogen

🪴 Sugarcane

Kharif / Annual crop 4,350.79 LMT (2024–25) India = World #2 producer
  • Temp: 21–27°C; high humidity; 75–100 cm rain
  • Soil: Deep rich loamy to clayey loam
  • Top states: UP > Maharashtra > Karnataka > TN > AP
  • Duration: 10–12 months (long-duration annual crop)
  • Uses: Sugar, jaggery, ethanol (blending programme)
  • Note: Brazil is world's #1 sugarcane producer

🧵 Cotton

Kharif 294.25 lakh bales (2024–25) Bt Cotton — key GM crop in India
  • Temp: 21–30°C; bright sunny days; 50–100 cm rain
  • Soil: Black cotton soil (Deccan Trap)
  • Top states: Gujarat > Maharashtra > Telangana > AP > Rajasthan
  • Note: "White Gold" — backbone of textile industry
  • Bt Cotton: Only approved GM crop in India (since 2002)
  • Global: India = world's largest cotton area; alternates #1/#2 in production with China year-on-year

🌿 Jute ("Golden Fibre")

Kharif India = World #2 producer
  • Temp: 24–37°C; 150–200 cm rainfall
  • Soil: Well-drained fertile alluvial soil (floodplains)
  • Top states: West Bengal > Bihar > Assam > Odisha
  • Note: Called "Golden Fibre" — used for bags, ropes, textiles
  • 2024–25: Production: 83.08 lakh bales
  • Global: Bangladesh is world's #1 jute producer

🥜 Oilseeds

Kharif + Rabi Record production 2024–25
  • Kharif oilseeds: Groundnut, Soybean, Sunflower, Sesame
  • Rabi oilseeds: Mustard (Rapeseed), Linseed
  • Top states: Rajasthan, MP, Gujarat, Haryana, UP (mustard); Gujarat, Andhra (groundnut)
  • 2024–25: Kharif: 276.38 LMT; Rabi: 140.31 LMT (both records)
  • Note: India is world's largest importer of edible oil (~$14 bn/year)
  • Mission: National Mission on Edible Oils (NMEO-Oil Palm, 2021)

7. Current Affairs 2024–25 — Crops & Cropping Seasons

Data — 2024–25
Ministry of Agriculture | 2nd Advance Estimates, March 2025

India Achieves Record Foodgrain Production of 353.96 MT in 2024–25

India achieved record production of rice, wheat, and maize in 2024–25. Total foodgrain production (Kharif + Rabi, excl. summer): 353.96 MT — up 21.66 MT from 2023–24. Kharif foodgrains: 166.39 MT; Rabi foodgrains: 164.53 MT. Kharif Rice set a record at 120.68 MT (up 74.20 LMT). Wheat reached 115.43 MT (up 21.38 LMT). Kharif Maize: 24.81 MT; Kharif Groundnut: 10.43 MT; Soybean: 15.13 MT. Improved soil moisture, quality seeds, and government schemes drove the increase.

Policy — 2023
UN / Ministry of Agriculture | 2023

International Year of Millets 2023 — Shree Anna Programme

India proposed and led the United Nations declaration of 2023 as the International Year of Millets (IYM 2023). The government re-branded millets as "Shree Anna" and promoted them as nutri-cereals. India is the world's largest producer of millets, contributing ~41% of global output. Key millets — Jowar, Bajra, Ragi, Foxtail, and Kodo — are Kharif crops grown in semi-arid and dryland regions. The programme linked Shree Anna to nutrition security, climate resilience (low water, low input), and farmer income diversification. Special Shree Anna schemes with FPO support were launched across Rajasthan, Karnataka, and Maharashtra.

Policy — 2024–25
Budget 2024–25 | Ministry of Agriculture

PM Dhan-Dhaanya Krishi Yojana — Crop Diversification in 100 Districts

The PM Dhan-Dhaanya Krishi Yojana (Budget 2025–26) targets 100 agriculture-lagging districts for crop diversification — including promoting Rabi crops in traditionally Kharif-dominant eastern India and Zaid crops in irrigated northern districts. The scheme encourages farmers to move from wheat-rice monoculture (especially Punjab-Haryana) toward pulses, oilseeds, and nutri-cereals — addressing soil degradation and crop diversification imperatives simultaneously.

Crisis — 2023–24
Ministry of Agriculture | 2023–24

El Niño Impact on Kharif 2023 — Uneven Monsoon, Pulse Shortfall

El Niño conditions in 2023 led to an uneven southwest monsoon — excess rainfall in some areas, significant deficiency in others. Kharif 2023 saw decline in pulse production (Tur: fell from 4.22 MT to 3.44 MT), cotton output dropped, and rice was affected in rain-shadow zones. However, total Kharif foodgrain production held up at 148.52 MT (FY24 final) due to strong rice output in eastern India. The vulnerability of Kharif crops to monsoon variability underlined the need for climate-resilient varieties and micro-irrigation expansion in Kharif regions.

Scheme — 2024
Ministry of Agriculture | 2024

National Food Security Mission (NFSM) — Pulses & Oilseeds Push

Under NFSM, the government is promoting pulses cultivation across traditionally non-pulse growing states (Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka) through contract farming and guaranteed MSP buyback. India imports 15–20% of its pulse requirement annually. NFSM 2024 targets include increasing pulse area by 20 lakh hectares and oilseed production by 20 MT by 2030 through HYV seeds, cluster demonstration, and crop insurance. The shift is from Kharif rice-wheat-cotton dominance toward Kharif and Rabi pulses and Rabi oilseeds.

Technology — 2024
ICAR / Digital Agriculture Mission | 2024

Digital Agriculture Mission — Crop Season Monitoring via Satellite

The Digital Agriculture Mission (₹2,817 crore) uses satellite-based remote sensing through FASAL (Forecasting Agricultural output using Space, Agro-meteorology and Land-based observations) and the AgriStack platform to monitor Kharif and Rabi crop area and production estimates in near-real-time. Kisan ID (Farmer Digital ID) is being linked to crop records — enabling targeted seed, fertiliser, and insurance delivery for each cropping season. The CHAMAN programme (horticulture) and the main crop monitoring systems together create a unified digital picture of India's three-season agricultural output.


8. Prelims PYQs — Crops & Cropping Seasons

Prelims2019
Q1. With reference to the cultivation of Kharif crops in India in the last five years, consider the following statements:
1. Area under rice cultivation is the highest.
2. Area under the cultivation of jowar is more than that of oilseeds.
3. Area of cotton cultivation is more than that of sugarcane.
4. Area under sugarcane cultivation has steadily decreased.
Which of the statements given above are correct?
  • ✓ (a) 1 and 3 only
  • (b) 2, 3 and 4 only
  • (c) 2 and 4 only
  • (d) 1, 2, 3 and 4
Answer: (a) 1 and 3 only.

Statement 1 is correct — rice occupies the highest area among Kharif crops, consistently exceeding all other crops. Statement 3 is correct — cotton area (typically ~125–130 lakh ha) exceeds sugarcane area (~50–55 lakh ha) among Kharif crops.

Statement 2 is wrong — Oilseeds area (groundnut + soybean + sunflower combined under Kharif) far exceeds jowar area. Statement 4 is wrong — sugarcane area has not steadily decreased; it has fluctuated with policy changes (ethanol blending incentives have actually increased area in recent years).

Tip: Among Kharif crops: Rice > Cotton > Sugarcane in area terms. Oilseeds aggregate area exceeds jowar.
Prelims2013
Q2. Consider the following crops:
1. Cotton   2. Groundnut   3. Rice   4. Wheat
Which of these are Kharif crops?
  • (a) 1 and 4
  • (b) 2 and 3 only
  • ✓ (c) 1, 2 and 3
  • (d) 2, 3 and 4
Cotton (1), Groundnut (2), and Rice (3) are all Kharif crops — sown during the monsoon season. Wheat (4) is a Rabi crop — sown in October–December after monsoon withdrawal and harvested in April–June. This is a foundational UPSC question. Key Kharif crops: Rice, Maize, Cotton, Bajra, Jowar, Groundnut, Soybean, Sugarcane, Jute. Key Rabi crops: Wheat, Barley, Mustard, Gram, Peas.
Prelims2021
Q3. Which of the following crops is/are grown in India as a Zaid crop?
1. Watermelon   2. Muskmelon   3. Green Gram (Moong)   4. Pigeon Pea (Arhar/Tur)
  • (a) 1 and 2 only
  • (b) 3 and 4 only
  • ✓ (c) 1, 2 and 3
  • (d) All four
Watermelon, Muskmelon, and Green Gram (Moong) are all Zaid crops. Pigeon Pea (Arhar/Tur) is primarily a Kharif crop, not a Zaid crop. Zaid crops are grown between March–June (between Rabi and Kharif). They include cucurbits (watermelon, muskmelon, cucumber, bitter gourd), short-duration pulses (moong, urad), and fodder crops (guar). Note: Moong (Green Gram) is grown in all three seasons but is particularly important as a Zaid crop. Arhar/Tur is distinctly a Kharif crop with a long duration (150–200 days).
Prelims2020
Q4. With reference to India's food crops, which of the following pairs of crop and its characteristic is correctly matched?
  • (a) Jowar — requires very high rainfall; grown in coastal plains
  • (b) Ragi — rich in iron and calcium; grown in red, black and sandy soils
  • ✓ (c) Ragi — rich in iron, calcium and micronutrients; grown in dry regions on red, black, sandy, loamy and shallow black soils
  • (d) Bajra — requires high rainfall; grown only in alluvial soils
Ragi (Finger Millet) is indeed very rich in iron, calcium, and other micronutrients and roughage. It is grown in dry regions on red, black, sandy, loamy, and shallow black soils. Jowar is a rain-fed crop grown in moist areas with less or no irrigation — not requiring very high rainfall, and not confined to coastal plains. Bajra grows in sandy soils and shallow black soil — it is actually well-suited to arid conditions and low rainfall, not high rainfall. These distinctions are frequently tested in UPSC.
Prelims2018
Q5. Which of the following statements about pulses in India is/are correct?
1. India is the world's largest producer as well as the largest consumer of pulses.
2. All pulses are leguminous crops and help restore soil fertility by fixing nitrogen.
3. Madhya Pradesh is the leading pulse-producing state in India.
  • (a) 2 and 3 only
  • (b) 1 only
  • ✓ (c) 1 and 3 only
  • (d) All three
Statements 1 and 3 are correct. Statement 2 is WRONGArhar (Tur/Pigeon Pea) does NOT fix nitrogen. All other major pulses (urad, moong, masur, peas, gram) are leguminous and fix atmospheric nitrogen through root nodules — restoring soil fertility. This makes them ideal for crop rotation. Arhar is an exception — it is grown in rotation but does not fix nitrogen. India is indeed the world's largest producer AND consumer of pulses. Madhya Pradesh leads in pulse production, followed by Rajasthan.

9. Mains PYQs — Crops & Agricultural Seasons

Mains2021GS Paper III
Q1. "India's over-dependence on the monsoon for Kharif crop production exposes millions of farmers to climate risk." Discuss the challenges and suggest strategies for climate-resilient agriculture. (150 words)
Introduction: Kharif crops — rice, maize, cotton, jowar, bajra, groundnut, soybean — are sown at the onset of the southwest monsoon (June–July) and harvested in September–October. They account for nearly 50% of India's annual foodgrain production but are entirely vulnerable to monsoon variability.

Challenges:
Monsoon dependency: 100–150 cm rainfall required; deficit or excess equally damaging
El Niño effects: 2023 El Niño caused uneven distribution — surplus in some zones, 40% deficit in others
Crop loss: Tur pulse production fell from 4.22 MT (2022–23) to 3.44 MT (2023–24) due to rainfall failure
Price volatility: Kharif crop failures immediately trigger food inflation (tomato, onion, pulses)
Groundwater stress: Paddy cultivation in Punjab-Haryana depletes groundwater for Kharif rice — unsustainable
Pest pressure: Humid monsoon conditions increase pest and disease incidence in Kharif

Strategies:
Climate-resilient varieties: ICAR has developed 1,888+ stress-tolerant varieties — drought/flood-resistant rice, heat-tolerant maize
Micro-irrigation: PMKSY "Per Drop More Crop" — drip/sprinkler for cotton and horticultural Kharif crops
Crop diversification: Shift from paddy-dominated Kharif to pulses and millets (Shree Anna)
Crop insurance: PMFBY — strengthen for Kharif crops; index-based insurance using satellite data
Kisan Rail: Cold storage logistics to manage post-harvest losses in Kharif produce
Agro-met advisories: Real-time weather forecasting via FASAL and Meghdoot app for farmers

Conclusion: India's Kharif season is the backbone of food security but its climate fragility demands systematic investment in resilient varieties, micro-irrigation, crop diversification, and digital agro-meteorology.
Mains2019GS Paper III
Q2. "The Green Revolution was largely a Rabi Revolution." Critically examine this statement with reference to India's wheat and rice production geography. (150 words)
Introduction: The Green Revolution (1960s–70s) transformed India's food security through HYV seeds, fertilisers, and irrigation — but its benefits were geographically and seasonally uneven.

Why the statement is largely correct:
• Green Revolution's biggest success was wheat (Rabi crop) in Punjab, Haryana, and western UP
• HYV wheat varieties (Lerma Rojo, Sonora-64 from Borlaug; Kalyan Sona) transformed the Indo-Gangetic Plains
• Wheat production: 11 MT (1960) → 115.43 MT (2024–25 record) — 10-fold increase
• Rabi season's predictability (irrigation-based; not monsoon-dependent) made it easier to adopt HYV technology
• Punjab-Haryana became "granary of India" through Rabi wheat cultivation

Why the statement is partial:
• Kharif rice also benefited — but unevenly; Green Revolution barely reached eastern India (Assam, Bihar, Odisha)
• Eastern India's rainfed Kharif rice remained low-productivity despite Green Revolution
• Second Green Revolution (2000s) targeted eastern Kharif rice — BGREI scheme in Bihar, WB, Assam
• Cotton (Kharif) was transformed by Bt Cotton introduction (2002) — a separate technological revolution

Geographic imbalance:
• North-west India (Rabi-dominant): benefited enormously
• Eastern and peninsular India (Kharif-dominant): largely bypassed
• This uneven growth contributed to inter-regional agricultural income disparities persisting today

Conclusion: The Green Revolution was indeed primarily a Rabi Revolution in geography and impact. Extending its benefits to Kharif-dominant eastern and peninsular India remains India's unfinished agricultural revolution.

10. Mock Mains Questions — Major Crops of India

Mains MockGS III10 Marks
⏱ Suggested time: 10 minutes | 150 words
Q1. India achieved a record foodgrain production of 353.96 MT in 2024–25. Examine the role of Kharif and Rabi seasons in achieving this milestone and the challenges that remain.
Kharif 166.39 MTRabi 164.53 MTRecord Rice 120.68 MTRecord Wheat 115.43 MTPMFBY / NFSM
Introduction: India achieved a record foodgrain output of 353.96 MT in 2024–25 (2nd Advance Estimates, Ministry of Agriculture), surpassing both the previous year's output and foodgrain targets — driven by strong performance across both Kharif and Rabi seasons.

Kharif 2024–25 — Contributions:
• Total Kharif foodgrain: 166.39 MT
• Kharif Rice: 120.68 MT (record; up 74.20 LMT from 2023–24) — driven by eastern India
• Kharif Maize: 24.81 MT (record); Groundnut: 10.43 MT (+17.66 LMT); Soybean: 15.13 MT (+20.70 LMT)
• Factors: Good monsoon in 2024; adoption of HYV seeds; direct seeded rice (DSR) technology; PM-Kisan confidence effect

Rabi 2024–25 — Contributions:
• Total Rabi foodgrain: 164.53 MT
• Wheat: 115.43 MT (record; up 21.38 LMT) — UP, Punjab, Haryana leading
• Gram: 11.54 MT; Lentil: 1.82 MT; Mustard: 12.87 MT
• Factors: Good soil moisture retention post-Kharif; expanded irrigation; improved seed distribution; PM Fasal Bima Yojana coverage

Key Enabling Factors:
• PM-KISAN Samman Nidhi — income support boosting input investment
• PMFBY — crop insurance reducing risk aversion
• Digital outreach via Krishi Vigyan Kendras and Kisan Call Centres
• NFSM — targeted crop-specific productivity missions

Remaining Challenges:
• Eastern India's Kharif productivity still low (Bihar, Odisha, Assam)
• Pulse self-sufficiency gap — still importing 15–20% of requirement
• Oilseed import dependence — edible oil imports ~$14 bn/year
• Climate risk: El Niño/La Niña threaten Kharif reliability
• Groundwater depletion in Rabi wheat-growing Punjab-Haryana

Conclusion: The 353.96 MT record reflects the synergy of good monsoon, policy support, and technology adoption across both seasons. Sustaining it requires diversification beyond wheat-rice and expanding irrigation in Kharif-dependent eastern India.
Mains MockGS I / GS III10 Marks
⏱ Suggested time: 10 minutes | 150 words
Q2. "Zaid crops are underutilised instruments for crop diversification, soil health improvement, and year-round farmer income." Substantiate with examples.
60–90 day durationNitrogen fixationDrought-tolerantMoong / CucumberCropping intensity
Introduction: Zaid crops — grown between the Rabi harvest (April–June) and the Kharif sowing (June–July) — occupy a 60–90 day window that is often left fallow. Leveraging this season can simultaneously address crop diversification, soil health, and income gaps for farmers.

Zaid for Crop Diversification:
• Farmers in wheat-rice monoculture zones (Punjab, Haryana, UP) can grow Moong (Green Gram) as a Zaid crop between the two seasons
• Moong has a 60–75 day cycle — fits perfectly in the Rabi-to-Kharif gap
• Cucurbits (watermelon, muskmelon, cucumber, bitter gourd) provide high-value horticulture income
• Tamil Nadu farmers grow short-duration pulses in Zaid for rotation — reducing rice-rice monoculture

Zaid for Soil Health:
Nitrogen fixation: Leguminous Zaid crops (Moong, Urad, Cowpea, Guar) fix 30–50 kg nitrogen per hectare — reducing chemical fertiliser need
Organic matter: Crop residue incorporation after short-duration Zaid crops improves soil carbon
Breaking pest cycles: Different crop breaks the pest and disease cycle between Rabi and Kharif
Moisture conservation: Ground cover of Zaid crops reduces soil evaporation and erosion during summer

Zaid for Year-Round Income:
• 3-month income gap between Rabi harvest and Kharif income is a major vulnerability for small farmers
• Watermelon: High-value market crop (₹8,000–15,000/acre) in just 75 days
• Fodder Zaid crops (Guar, Cowpea): Dual income — sell excess, feed cattle
• FPO-linked Zaid vegetable clusters in Rajasthan and UP have increased farmer income by 25–30% compared to fallowing

Policy Gap: Zaid crops receive the least attention in MSP policy — no announced MSP for cucurbits and most Zaid vegetables. NFSM-Pulses coverage of Zaid Moong is improving but incomplete.

Conclusion: Promoting Zaid crops through dedicated MSP support, FPO linkages, and awareness campaigns can unlock a hidden season of agricultural productivity — simultaneously addressing soil health, income stability, and crop diversification goals.
Mains MockGS III15 Marks
⏱ Suggested time: 15 minutes | 250 words
Q3. "India's crop diversification challenge is essentially about shifting from a two-crop calendar (wheat-rice) to a three-season, multi-crop economy." Critically examine with reference to Kharif, Rabi, and Zaid seasons and their role in food security and farmer income.
Wheat-rice monocultureShree Anna milletsPulses deficitOilseed import $14bnNMEO / NFSM
Introduction: India grows wheat (Rabi) and rice (Kharif) with unmatched efficiency. Yet this very success has created a monoculture trap — depleting groundwater, degrading soils, and leaving India import-dependent for pulses and oilseeds. True agricultural transformation requires leveraging all three seasons across diverse crops.

The Wheat-Rice Monoculture Problem:
• Punjab-Haryana-UP: Over 80% area under wheat-rice rotation
• Consequences: (a) Groundwater depletion — 80%+ Punjab blocks overexploited; (b) Soil degradation — monoculture reduces soil carbon; (c) Stubble burning — contributes to Delhi's winter pollution; (d) MSP dependency — farmers won't diversify without guaranteed price for alternatives

Kharif Diversification Opportunities:
Millets (Shree Anna): Drought-tolerant, climate-resilient, nutritious — IYM 2023 was India's push; Kharif Millets: 137.52 LMT (2024–25)
Pulses: Kharif Tur (Arhar): 35.11 LMT — still below self-sufficiency; India imports 15–20%
Oilseeds: Kharif Groundnut + Soybean at record levels but India still imports ~$14 bn in edible oils
Cotton: 294.25 lakh bales — India is world's largest producer but quality issues persist

Rabi Diversification Opportunities:
• Mustard/Rapeseed: 128.73 LMT (2024–25 record) — NMEO-Oil Palm and mustard mission driving expansion
• Chickpea (Gram): 115.35 LMT — critical for pulse self-sufficiency
• Rabi vegetables: Potato, Onion — but extreme price volatility discourages consistent cropping

Zaid Season — Most Underutilised:
• 60–90 day window between Rabi and Kharif currently left fallow by most wheat-rice farmers
• Moong cultivation in this window: fixes nitrogen (saves fertiliser cost), provides protein supply, earns ₹8,000–12,000/acre
• Cucurbits (watermelon, muskmelon): high-value, low-water — ideal for summer income
• Policy gap: No dedicated Zaid MSP for most crops; limited insurance coverage

Policy Levers:
• Crop-specific MSP with procurement commitment for Rabi pulses and Zaid moong
• NMEO-Oil Palm: 10 lakh ha target for oilseed area expansion
• NFSM-Pulses: Cluster demonstrations in non-traditional pulse states
• PM Dhan-Dhaanya: 100 lagging districts — crop diversification mandate
• Shree Anna: Tribal and dryland farmer focus — nutri-cereal cultivation

Conclusion: India's food and nutritional security cannot be built on wheat and rice alone. A deliberate policy of making the third season (Zaid) productive, expanding Kharif pulse and millet cultivation, and deepening Rabi oilseed coverage is the pathway to a genuinely diversified, resilient agricultural economy — one that feeds its citizens, improves farmer income, and protects its soils.

11. Practice MCQs — Major Crops of India (5 Questions)

Click your answer. Green = correct; Red = wrong. Explanation appears immediately.

Q 1
Which of the following correctly identifies the meaning of the terms "Kharif" and "Rabi" and their respective cropping seasons?
Both Kharif and Rabi are Arabic words — not Sanskrit. Kharif means "Autumn" and refers to monsoon crops sown in June–July and harvested in September–October. Rabi means "Spring" and refers to winter crops sown in October–December (post-monsoon) and harvested in April–June. Option (a) reverses the meanings and seasons. Option (c) incorrectly states the language origin. Option (d) reverses the sowing months.
Q 2
Consider the following statements about Zaid crops:
1. Zaid crops are grown between the Rabi and Kharif seasons, typically from March to June.
2. They generally require more water than both Kharif and Rabi crops.
3. Leguminous Zaid crops improve soil fertility by fixing atmospheric nitrogen.
4. Pigeon Pea (Arhar/Tur) is a classic example of a Zaid crop.
Which of the above statements are correct?
Statements 1 and 3 are correct. Statement 2 is WRONG — Zaid crops actually require less water than both Kharif and Rabi crops; they are drought-tolerant by nature, making them suitable for the dry summer period. Statement 4 is WRONG — Pigeon Pea (Arhar/Tur) is primarily a Kharif crop, not Zaid. Classic Zaid crops include watermelon, muskmelon, cucumber, bitter gourd, pumpkin, moong (green gram), and guar. Moong (Green Gram) is the most important leguminous Zaid crop — it fixes nitrogen and fits in the 60–75 day inter-season window.
Q 3
India achieved a record foodgrain production in 2024–25. Which of the following crop-production pairs (from 2024–25 Second Advance Estimates) is correctly matched?
Option (b) is correct per the Ministry of Agriculture's 2nd Advance Estimates (March 2025): Kharif Rice: 120.68 MT (record, up 74.20 LMT from 2023–24); Wheat: 115.43 MT (record, up 21.38 LMT); Sugarcane: 4,350.79 lakh tonnes. Cotton: 294.25 lakh bales (not 400). Total foodgrain (Kharif + Rabi, excl. summer): 353.96 MT — not 290.45 or 420 MT. These are the most current UPSC-relevant agriculture production data points.
Q 4
Which of the following statements about pulses in India is INCORRECT?
Option (c) is INCORRECT. Arhar (Pigeon Pea/Tur) does NOT fix atmospheric nitrogen through root nodules — unlike all other major pulses (urad, moong, masur, gram, peas) which are leguminous and fix nitrogen. This makes Arhar an exception among pulses. All other statements are correct: India is #1 producer and consumer of pulses globally; MP leads in pulse production (followed by Rajasthan, Maharashtra, UP, Karnataka); and pulses are indeed the primary protein source in vegetarian diets. This distinction about Arhar is a classic UPSC trap.
Q 5
The Green Revolution in India was described as "largely a Rabi Revolution" because:
The Green Revolution's most spectacular impact was on wheat production (a Rabi crop) in Punjab, Haryana, and western UP — driven by HYV varieties (Lerma Rojo, Sonora-64, Kalyan Sona), irrigation infrastructure, and fertiliser use. Wheat production rose from ~11 MT (1960) to 115+ MT today. Rice (Kharif) also benefited — but primarily in the NW; eastern India's rainfed Kharif rice was largely left behind. The "Second Green Revolution" or BGREI (Bringing Green Revolution to Eastern India) scheme specifically tried to extend the gains to Kharif-dominant eastern states. HYV varieties did exist for Kharif rice — so option (d) is wrong.
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