According to the Central Research Institute of Dryland Agriculture, after the green revolution, farmers started using synthetic fertilizers and chemical pesticides in large doses to increase yields. At the beginning of the decade, the fruits of cotton began to fall and gradually Monochrotophos,Endosulphon, quinolphos, and other pesticides were introduced. And then the pests developed immunity to pesticides and more powerful pesticides that polluted the ground water even more.
During this time, the multinational corporation Monsanto introduced new disease-resistant seeds. These are the types of seeds But if the team acquires our agricultural seed, the farmers will also have to spend and lose their rights to their seeds. Meanwhile, some more expensive pesticides like Avaunt, Trisar, Imida and Chloride have also entered the market. Fake seeds and pesticides soon followed.
The answer to this question is in educating the farmer about the seeds and going back to the practice of the actual harvest of the grain seeds. Only then will the pain of the farmer cease. The Andhra Pradesh Agriculture department is currently working on this.
Total change
Ancient India believed that the whole world was one family. Today’s old man believes that the whole world is one market.
A new innovation has made it possible to transmit information from one corner of the world to another within seconds. In the new times, even people and goods can make trans-continental trips. Now citizens of any country can do business or work from another country.
Where production costs less, factories are moved there. In this game to cut costs, the environment is very important. Polluting industries are moving to new areas, people have become environmentally conscious and demand to implement environmental regulations.
Globalization began when developing countries began to develop their waste, pharmaceutical and dye industries for poorer nations.
In developing countries, laws to control pollution are strict and rigorously enforced. Industries are forced to spend more on reducing costs, which turns out to be quite expensive. So they transfer themselves to poor countries to reduce these costs. In these circumstances, the pressure is increasing that important goods should form factories that meet environmental standards such as place of origin.
Developed nations have thus made a global profit from natural resources and in the course of development has released pollution. Even now, green gases continue to be noticed such as methane and carbon dioxide and others such as chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs); which destroy the ozone layer.
To repair the damages caused to the environment, the Royal Protocol urges countries all over the world to ban the use of CFCs. The Kyoto Convention addresses the issue of greenhouse effects and calls for a moratorium on activities that emit greenhouse gases.
The green version and its impact
During the green revolution, synthetic pesticides and insecticides were widely used, causing incalculable damage to soil fertility and destroying the micronutrients in it.
Hybrid crop varieties designed to boost productivity could not resist pests. In addition, few varieties of seeds are promoted. Hence the variety of loss of seeds and crops. The excessive use of water, which had been promoted by green development, led to the drying up of water sources.
High yielding varieties or genetically modified seeds cannot problem solving be hungry. the speech is expected. On the other hand, new health problems have increased. Blue revolution fish and shrimp are still multiplying water sources with chemicals.
The advent of call centers increased income, but the effects of lack of food, promoting food quickly and insufficient sleep began to show in pain.
Globalization has eradicated the crisis of night and day. The working hours have changed and the places of commerce, restaurants and hospitals are all day and night, create waste. Smaller nuclear families have greater challenges to meet.