| PM's
address at the 93rd Session of Indian Science Congress
January 3, 2006
Hyderabad
I am delighted to be here in Hyderabad to inaugurate
the 93rd Session of the Indian Science Congress. I would,
at the very outset, like to pay homage to the memory of Professor
M C Puri who was gunned down in the greatest temple of Indian
science by the most reprehensible and cowardly enemies of
our people. Dr Puri was a soldier of knowledge. He lived a
life of peace, dedicated to science and education. No civilized
people can condone such an uncivilized act.
It is a symbol of the success of Indian
science and technology, of our emergence as a knowledge power,
that the symbols and temples of our knowledge society are
today being targeted by terrorists. I am confident that all
our knowledge workers will close ranks and join the struggle
to make India a great nation, a humane and modern nation,
a knowledge power. No force on the earth can weaken this resolve
of the Indian people.
Ladies and Gentlemen,
I am happy that you have chosen an agricultural
university campus as the venue for this session since this
year we mark the centenary of the setting up of modern agricultural
colleges in the sub-continent. Our agricultural universities
have played an important role in the agrarian transformation
of India.
I am also happy that the focal theme for this
session is the role of science and technology in the promotion
of integrated rural development. I believe you are returning
to this theme after almost three decades. It was in Andhra
Pradesh, the rice bowl of India, that Indiraji addressed the
Science Congress on this very subject, in 1976. It was a decade
after our country had passed through the worst agricultural
years since Independence. It was said in the mid-sixties that
India was living a ship-to-mouth existence! By
1976, the Green Revolution had transformed many parts of the
country.
Our scientists, our farmers, our community development
staff and our extension workers, worked together to liberate
the country from external dependence in food. The Indian Science
Congress paid tribute to the work of scientists like Dr Y
Nayudamma, a great son of Andhra, Dr M S Swaminathan, who
is here with us today, and many others who played a key role
in taking the benefits of science to the farm. Dr Nayudamma
was among the first to urge scientists to step in and help
in integrated rural development. He initiated the Karimnagar
Project, here in Andhra Pradesh, that sought to bring together
scientists, technologists, extension workers and community
development staff. It will be interesting to see what lessons
were learnt by that experiment, and how we can take forward
that initiative.
Thirty years later, we can say that the Indian
farmer has indeed benefited from the contribution of science
and technology. However, in spite of the advances made, there
still remains the challenge of bridging the development gap
between urban and rural India; of increasing rural incomes;
of increasing agricultural productivity; of increasing investment
in agriculture and rural non-farm economy; of improving rural
infrastructure and in the final analysis, forever ending the
so-called divide between Bharat and India. The technologies
and the strategies unleashed by the first Green Revolution
have run their course. This requires, as I have said before,
a Second Green Revolution. In non-food crops, in horticulture,
in new plant varieties.
As I see our agricultural growth plateau, I
realize that there is a need for a renewed thrust on research
that can enhance farm productivity. We need greater emphasis
on research that can increase the efficiency of utilization
of inputs; that can improve farm management practices; that
can reduce post harvest losses through better post-harvest
management technologies in storage, transportation and processing;
that can, in the final analysis, increase both yields and
value addition at the farmer level leading to better incomes.
This is extremely important if we have to ensure that our
countrymen who depend on agriculture for sustenance are not
left behind in this age of technology and knowledge.
India also needs increased application of science
and modern technology to forest conservation and management,
environmental protection, water conservation and utilization
of herbs and plants. We need a harmonious blend of advanced
science and technology, appropriate technology and local knowledge
to ensure an equitable distribution of the benefits of new
knowledge.
In 1976, Indiraji had said to the Science Congress,
and I quote:
The overwhelming majority of our people
live in villages and will continue to do so for years to come.
I would go further and say that we dont even want to
uproot them. All over the world, urbanization has brought
comfort and stimulation; but who could claim that it has not
given rise to complicated problems? Rural life should be so
enriched as to prevent the migration of people and resources
from villages to towns. Expedients worked out in countries
where the agricultural population form but a small part of
the work force cannot serve our country.
Indirajis wise words ring true even today.
Our strategy for rural India has to be one of improving the
quality of life in village India, based on easily accessible
and appropriate technologies, so that people can continue
to live where their forefathers have for generations and yet
live comfortable and decent lives. Science must serve the
needs of our farmers if scientists wish to contribute to the
building of a more prosperous India.
Mahatma Gandhi once said: If the village
perishes, India perishes too. He was echoing the thoughts
of Oliver Goldsmith who once wrote: A bold peasantry,
their country's pride, / When once destroyed, can never be
supplied.
Ladies and Gentlemen,
My vision of rural India is of a modern agrarian,
industrial and services economy co-existing side by side,
where people can live in well-equipped villages and commute
easily to work, be it on the farm or in the non-farm economy.
There is much that modern science and technology can do to
realize this vision. Rural incomes have to be increased. Rural
infrastructure has to be improved. Rural health and education
needs have to be met. Employment opportunities have to be
created in rural areas.
Our Government has taken several initiatives
in each area. We have launched Bharat Nirman, a time-bound
programme to improve rural infrastructure, including rural
roads, power, housing, telecom, and irrigation. We have launched
a National Rural Health Mission, enhanced funding for rural
education and for the mid-day meal programme for school children.
We have enacted the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act
and increased availability of credit to farmers. All these
initiatives are aimed at offering a New Deal to Rural India.
The challenge before you is to pursue good quality
science, world class research and yet be able to address the
needs of development and employment creation in rural India.
Those of you who meet this challenge will be regarded as the
real architects and builders of modern India.
Ladies and Gentlemen,
Let me focus my attention on three challenges
that science and technology must address to promote rural
development. First, we have to increase agricultural productivity
- the productivity of land, labour, seed and plant and other
factors of production.
This is what I call the Second Green Revolution.
Second, we have to develop affordable and appropriate technologies
for energy and water. Third, we have to promote labour-using,
yet efficient and relevant technologies in both farm and non-farm
business.
Second Green Revolution
The National Commission on Farmers has suggested
a programme for Agricultural Renewal that can
be the starting point of the Second Green Revolution. The
five components suggested are: (a) soil health enhancement
through concurrent attention to the physics, chemistry and
microbiology of the soils;
(b) water harvesting, water conservation and
sustainable and equitable use of water; (c) access to affordable
credit and to crop and life insurance reform; (d) development
and dissemination of appropriate technologies and, (e) improved
opportunities, infrastructure and regulations for marketing
of produce.
I would add two more elements to this package,
namely: (f) the application of science and biotechnology to
the improvement of seeds and utilization of herbal and other
plants; and, (g) the application of science to animal husbandry
to improve the productivity of livestock and poultry. There
is much that science and technology can do in each of these
seven areas. There is much that agricultural universities
can in fact do in each of these areas.
The technologies we develop must be economically
affordable and relevant to small and marginal farmers, especially
in drought prone regions. Two criticisms of the first Green
Revolution have been: one, that it did not benefit dry land
agriculture; and, two, that it was not scale neutral and had
benefited large farms and big farmers. While evidence shows
that this was not always the case, we must ensure that Second
Green Revolution technologies have a special focus on dry
land agriculture and do benefit small and marginal farmers.
The Second Green Revolution will not be possible
without a rejuvenation of our agricultural universities and
research institutions. We have to revitalize these institutions.
We have to improve their academic standing and their relevance
to agrarian society and the economy.
All advanced agricultural economies are knowledge-based
economies. We must broaden the knowledge base of our farmers
to enable them to make the best use of new technologies. Our
farmers needs for information are multi-faceted and
these are not limited to technology alone. They need information
about agriculture as a business, about farming practices,
about policy initiatives, about best practices of other farmers
and on market intelligence. Therefore, timely availability
of information is a critical component in the development
of our agriculture.
Our extension services need to gear up to meet
these and emerging demands of farmers. Extension services
have languished in the past two decades. We have to find innovative
ways in which the skills of agricultural graduates can be
harnessed for effective extension work. New communications
tools can be used to overcome physical barriers between farmers
and researchers. I am happy to learn that the Indian Council
for Agricultural Research is seeking to provide electronic
connectivity to about 200 Krishi Vigyan Kendras to make them
hubs for accessing information by our farmers. I believe that
Krishi Vigyan Kendras should function as knowledge banks
in each district. They must bring scientists, extension workers
and farmers together and bridge the gap between potential
and actual farm yields.
Energy and Water
Water and energy, like land, are scarce resources.
Science and technology can help on the supply side by increasing
factor productivity and by developing technologies that conserve
utilization of these resources. The western world has not
invested enough in research on water, bio-mass, solar and
other relevant sources of energy because they are not under
the kind of pressure we face. Solar energy and bio-mass are
areas where Indian scientists must be at the forefront of
research and development. I believe we can contribute to more
economic use of resources, to improved productivity and to
affordable infrastructure development through such research.
Our Government will encourage world class research in appropriate
water and energy related technologies.
We are in urgent need of science-based solutions
in energy and water provisioning, especially in rain-fed areas.
Ground water use needs to be accompanied by mandatory rainwater
harvesting and aquifer recharge. Our Government has taken
several initiatives in watershed development and ground water
replenishment. In some regions of the country, inter-linking
of rivers may contribute to reduced dependence on ground water
and to re-charge of ground water. I seek a more informed debate
on utilization of river waters in a manner that would be ecologically
sustainable and economically affordable.
I hope the session devoted to these issues at
this Congress can come forward with suggestions as to how
we can bring 10 million hectares of additional land under
irrigation without associated environmental damage and with
minimal human dislocation.
Employment Generation and Non-Farm Activity
Ladies and Gentlemen,
Public policy must respond to an important trend
in the Indian economy. While the share of agriculture in national
income is falling rapidly, the share of population dependent
on agriculture is not declining as rapidly. This is creating
rural distress and contributing to enforced migration to urban
areas. The only sensible response to this trend is to create
productive employment opportunities in rural areas, both in
the farm and non-farm sectors. Scientists and technologists
must develop labour-using technologies both in agriculture
and in rural manufacturing so that jobs can be created closer
home for those of our citizens who live in villages.
This requires a multi-pronged approach. To be
sure, it requires investment in skill development. It requires
financing of labour-using technologies on the farm, especially
in processing, packaging and marketing farm produce. We must
also help modernize our handlooms and handicraft industries
to enable rural artisans to reconnect with new markets. New
functional townships must be developed, away from existing
cities but equipped with basic infrastructure, to attract
new investment in manufacturing and services sectors in rural
areas.
All this opens up opportunities for new technology
development. Agricultural universities must be intellectually
alive to such possibilities and develop courses and programmes
to train people living in rural areas. We have no option but
to encourage people living in rural areas to continue to live
there even as the quality of their life is improved and more
and more modern amenities are provided for them.
To enable this we must look at decentralized
energy generation, decentralized social and economic infrastructure
development, decentralization of governance and of the rules
and regulations governing business activity. Excessive centralization
has been the bane of development in India. While we create
a single market, removing internal barriers to trade and movement
of goods, services and people, we must enable the development
of local markets so that local solutions can be generated
to address local problems.
Ladies and Gentlemen,
It is my sincere hope that within the foreseeable
future we can rapidly modernize rural India and ensure that
the gains of development reach every corner of our vast country.
Our scientists must work with Government, with non-government
organizations, with local bodies and stakeholder groups to
make this happen. I hope your Congress will devote itself
to such urgent concerns of our people, and enthuse you to
rededicate yourselves to the greater glory of our Nation.
I wish you all a Happy New Year. May your path
be blessed. Jai Hind!
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