Blitz Bureau
NEW DELHI: Prime Minister Narendra Modi said on August 3 that India has emerged as a food surplus country with a robust agriculture sector and was ready to share its experience to help solve the global problem of hunger and malnutrition amid the challenge posed by climate change.
Inaugurating the 32nd International Conference of Agricultural Economists (ICAE) here being attended by delegates from 75 countries, PM Modi said India has developed as many as 1,900 new climate-resilient varieties of seeds for various crops to benefit the country’s farmers which included types of rice that requires 25 per cent less water. He further stated India has also developed a basket of “superfoods” such as black rice and millet and said that the country was ready to share it with the world, especially to benefit the Global South.
PM Modi explained that the black rice being grown in the northeast states such as Manipur and Assam has medicinal value and could fetch good returns to benefit farmers. Similarly, India has emerged as the largest producer of millet which is considered a superfood and is being grown on the “minimum water and maximum production” principle which will help to solve the problem of global malnutrition. The potential of millets was highlighted with the UN celebrating 2023 as the Year of the Millet, he pointed out. PM Modi said that India had also highlighted at the G20 conference that the country believes in the principle of ‘One Earth-One Family’ and was keen to contribute to the removal of hunger and malnutrition.