Food Security and Climate Change: A Brewing Crisis: Editorial Analysis for UPSC Dt.22 june 2025.
Food Security and Climate Change: A Brewing Crisis: Editorial Analysis for UPSC Dt.22 june 2025.
Source Credits:
The Hindu, Editorial Analysis – June 22, 2025
Down To Earth, Agriculture & Environment Sections
The Indian Express, Explained Column – Climate Impact on Wheat, June 2025
Introduction
Climate change is no longer a distant environmental concern but a direct threat to food security in India and globally. Recent editorials highlight that rising temperatures are leading to smaller, lower-quality wheat grains, potentially jeopardizing the availability and affordability of food.
Wheat, a staple food for over 60% of Indians, is especially vulnerable during its grain-filling stage. The editorial calls for urgent reforms in climate-resilient agriculture, irrigation systems, and crop research to mitigate this unfolding crisis.
Impact of Climate Change on Wheat and Food Systems
1. Rising Temperatures Affect Grain Formation
Research from ICAR and IARI shows that temperatures above 32°C during March–April reduce wheat grain size by 10–15%.
The grain-filling period is shortened, lowering both yield and nutritional quality.
India’s March 2024 heatwave caused an estimated 8–10% drop in wheat output, affecting procurement and exports.
2. Reduced Availability and Rising Prices
Lower output reduces market availability and increases dependency on imports.
Wheat prices surged by 14% in the last quarter due to lower rabi harvest and increased MSP.
Urban and rural poor are most affected, increasing food insecurity and malnutrition risk.
3. Threat to India’s Food Security Architecture
Rising input costs, falling yields, and erratic rainfall affect public distribution under NFSA.
Buffer stocks with FCI are under stress due to repeated shortfalls and export bans.
Could strain India’s global food aid programs and worsen regional hunger, especially in South Asia.
Broader Consequences
Issue
Impact
Inflation
Higher food prices affect headline inflation and monetary policy
Nutrition
Protein and micronutrient quality of grains declines with heat stress
Farmer Distress
Crop failures impact income, leading to debt and rural-urban migration
Social Unrest
Food shortages have historically triggered unrest and protests
Strengthen and expand PMFBY to cover heatwave-related yield losses.
4. Strengthening Food Stocks and Distribution
Improve FCI storage infrastructure and promote decentralized procurement.
Integrate real-time climate risk with PDS allocation planning.
UPSC Relevance
Prelims:
Programs: PMKSY, PMFBY, NFSA
Institutions: ICAR, IARI
Wheat-growing regions in India
Mains – GS Paper 3:
Climate change and agriculture
Food security and inflation control
Role of technology in sustainable agriculture
Government initiatives for agri-resilience
Sample Mains Question
Q.Climate change is increasingly becoming a threat to India’s food security. Discuss its impact on wheat production and suggest measures to make Indian agriculture climate-resilient. (10 marks)
Conclusion
India’s food security, once considered robust due to strong procurement systems and minimum support prices, now faces climate-induced fragility. The editorial rightly calls for a paradigm shift in agricultural planning, with urgent attention to research, risk mitigation, and resilience-building. The future of India’s food system hinges not just on productivity, but on its ability to adapt.
Source Credits:
The Hindu, “Rising heat, falling wheat” – Editorial, June 22, 2025
Down To Earth, “How India’s grain belt is under stress” – Agriculture Focus
The Indian Express, “Explained: Climate stress on wheat and what it means for India’s food system”
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