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India’s pesticide regulation faces the challenge of balancing agricultural productivity with public health and export competitiveness. Discuss. (10 Marks, 150 words)

Introduction:

India is among the world’s largest consumers of pesticides, crucial for protecting crops and ensuring food security. However, rising concerns over pesticide residues, health hazards, and export rejections necessitate a regulatory framework that balances farm productivity with consumer safety and global market standards.

Need for pesticides in agriculture:

  • Protect crops from pests and diseases, reducing yield losses (estimated 15–25%).
  • Support food security for a growing population.
  • Improve farmers’ incomes by ensuring stable production.

Challenges in pesticide regulation:

  • Public health risks: Excessive or unsafe pesticide residues linked to cancer, neurological disorders, and endocrine disruption.
  • Weak regulatory framework: The Insecticides Act, 1968 is outdated; approval and monitoring mechanisms remain inadequate.
  • Export competitiveness: Indian exports frequently face rejection due to Maximum Residue Limit (MRL) violations, especially in spices, rice, tea, and grapes.
  • Environmental concerns: Soil degradation, water contamination, biodiversity loss, and decline of pollinators.
  • Enforcement gaps: Limited residue testing laboratories, poor farmer awareness, and continued use of banned or highly hazardous pesticides.

Way forward:

  • Enact the Pesticide Management Bill with science-based risk assessment.
  • Promote Integrated Pest Management (IPM), biopesticides, and precision agriculture.
  • Harmonise Indian MRLs with Codex Alimentarius and key export markets.
  • Strengthen surveillance, digital traceability, farmer training, and residue-testing infrastructure.

Conclusion:

India’s pesticide policy must shift from merely increasing agricultural output to ensuring safe, sustainable, and globally competitive agriculture. A balanced regulatory regime will safeguard farmers’ livelihoods, public health, environmental sustainability, and India’s credibility in international agricultural trade.

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Pesticide Regulation in India: Balancing Growth and Safety

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