
Land Resources Management
- Land and water have been the basic elements of life support system on our planet since the dawn of civilization.
- All great civilizations, flourished where these resources were available in plenty and they declined or perished with the depletion of these resources.
- In recent years, the land resource has been subjected to a variety of pressures. Still it is surviving and sustaining mankind.
- What is alarming in the way land is being used is the tendency towards over-exploitation on account of a number of reasons leading this pristine resource being robbed of its resilience.
- Of all the species on the earth, man is the chief culprit of this degradation. He views land in terms of its utility, meaning the capability to meet his perceived needs and wants.
- The most easily categorised varieties of land from the utility point of view are – land fit for use, land with potential for use and land which appears useless at least in the foreseeable future.
- Here probably lies the genesis of the problem of land degradation and erosion of ecosystems. Mahatma Gandhi had said -“The Earth has enough for everybody’s need but not for everybody’s greed”.
- Preserving, protecting and defending the land resources has been part of our age-old culture. The respect for the importance of land resources is best depicted in the conventional concept of Panchabhutas – land, water, fire, sky and air that constitute a set of divine forces.
- There are innumerable examples of the traditional conservation practices and systems, which are still surviving and are effective. But with the advent of modern age and the advent of newer forces, this tradition is fast deteriorating mainly on account of – consumerism, materialistic value systems, short-term profit-driven motives and greed of the users
Land Resources
The utilization of land depends upon physical factors like topography, soil and climate as well as upon human factors such as the density of population duration of occupation of the area, land tenure and technical levels of the people.
LAND USE IN INDIA
The major land uses in India are:
- Net sown Area
- Agriculture land means cultivated area, it includes net cropped area and fallow lands. Cropped area in the year under consideration in called net sown area.
- India stands seventh in the world in terms of total geographical area but second in terms of cultivated land.
- Net shown Area is about 46%.
- Percentage wise Punjab and Haryana are highest and Arunachal Pradesh is Lowest (3.2% )
- The net sown area and the area sown more than once together are called gross cultivated area.
- Forest Area
- This includes all land classified either as forest under any legal enactment, or administered as forest, whether State-owned or private, and whether wooded or maintained as potential forest land.
- The area of crops raised in the forest and grazing lands or areas open for grazing within the forests remain included under the “forest area”.
- Area under Non-agricultural Uses
- This includes all land occupied by buildings, roads and railways or under water, e.g. rivers and canals, and other land put to uses other than agriculture.
- Barren and Un-culturable Land
- This includes all land covered by mountains, deserts, etc.
- Land which cannot be brought under cultivation except at an exorbitant cost is classified as unculturable whether such land is in isolated blocks or within cultivated holdings.
- Permanent Pasture and other Grazing Land
- This includes all grazing land whether it is permanent pasture/meadows or not.
- Village common grazing land is included under this category.
- Land under Miscellaneous Tree Crops, etc.
- This includes all cultivable land which is not included in ‘Net area sown’ but is put to some agricultural use.
- Land under trees, thatching grasses, bamboo bushes and other groves for fuel, etc. which are not included under ‘Orchards’ are classified under this category.
- Culturable Waste Land
- This includes land available for cultivation, whether taken up or not taken up for cultivation once, but not cultivated during the last five years or more in succession including the current year for some reason or the other .
- Such land may be either fallow or covered with shrubs and jungles which are not put to any use.
- Fallow Lands other than Current Fallows -This includes all land which was taken up for cultivation but is temporarily out of cultivation for a period of not less than one year and not more than five years.
- Current Fallows- This represents cropped area which is kept fallow during the current year
Policies, Acts, Programmes by Govt. on Land Resources
National Land Reforms Policy
- Abolition of intermediary tenures
- Tenancy reforms
- Ceiling on agricultural holdings and redistribution of surplus d="M549.7 124.1c-6.3-23.7-24.8-42.3-48.3-48.6C458.8 64 288 64 288 64S117.2 64 74.6 75.5c-23.5 6.3-42 24.9-48.3 48.6-11.4 42.9-11.4 132.3-11.4 132.3s0 89.4 11.4 132.3c6.3 23.7 24.8 41.5 48.3 47.8C117.2 448 288 448 288 448s170.8 0 213.4-11.5c23.5-6.3 42-24.2 48.3-47.8 11.4-42.9 11.4-132.3 11.4-132.3s0-89.4-11.4-132.3zm-317.5 213.5V175.2l142.7 81.2-142.7 81.2z"/> Subscribe on YouTube