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Rural-Urban Linkages: The Stubble Burning Dilemma

1. What is Stubble Burning?

  • Definition: Burning of crop residue (straw/stubble) after harvest
  • Primary Regions: Punjab, Haryana, Western UP (now also Madhya Pradesh)
  • Crops Involved: Rice-wheat cropping system (Green Revolution legacy)
  • Reason: Short window between rice harvest and wheat sowing

2. Why Do Farmers Burn Stubble?

Reason Explanation
Time Pressure Short gap between crops (rice-wheat cycle)
Cost Cheaper than mechanical removal or alternatives
Lack of Access Expensive equipment (e.g., Happy Seeders, Super SMS)
Delayed Subsidies Govt support often late or insufficient
Limited Alternatives Bio-decomposers not yet widely scaled

👨‍🌾 Most farmers do not want to burn—they understand the health and soil impacts.


3. Impact on Urban Air Quality

  • Transboundary Pollution: Smoke travels hundreds of km
  • Delhi NCR: On some days, >48% of PM2.5 comes from stubble burning
  • Seasonal Aggravation: Occurs in winter when air is stagnant → prolonged smog
  • Health Risks: Worsens respiratory illnesses, triggers emergency responses

4. Alternatives to Stubble Burning

Solution Description Status
Happy Seeder/Super SMS Machines that sow wheat without removing straw Limited adoption due to cost
Bio-Decomposers Spray (e.g., by IARI) breaks stubble into compost Piloted in UP, Punjab, Delhi
Takachar Converts crop waste into fuel MIT-supported, scaling in Punjab
Policy Support Timely subsidies, awareness, infrastructure Inconsistent implementation

5. Systemic Challenges

  • Green Revolution Legacy: Rice-wheat system not native to Punjab-Haryana
  • Water Stress: Falling water tables delay sowing → shorter turnaround time
  • Policy Gaps: Delayed subsidies, lack of scalable alternatives
  • Livelihood Pressures: Farmers caught between productivity and sustainability

6. Role of Youth and Citizens

  • Educate: Learn and teach about AQI, pollution sources
  • Advocate: Campaign for clean air in schools/colleges
  • Monitor: Use apps to track and report local pollution
  • Connect: Understand rural-urban linkages and support systemic solutions

7. Key Takeaways

  • Stubble burning is a systemic issue, not just a farmer’s problem
  • Collaborative solutions are needed—not punitive measures
  • Technology + Policy + Awareness must work together
  • Rural-urban equity is central to solving air pollution

📘 Exam Tip

Focus on the systemic nature of stubble burning—link it to Green Revolution policies, farmer livelihoods, and transboundary pollution. Emphasize alternatives like bio-decomposers and tech innovations (e.g., Takachar). Highlight the need for collaborative (not blame-based) solutions and the role of youth in advocacy and awareness.