49 min

Feeding the world and the Green Revolution The Forum

    • Society & Culture

In February 2024, the renowned Indian geneticist Dr. MS Swaminathan was posthumously awarded the country’s highest civilian honour, the Bharat Ratna. This was in recognition of the dramatic increase in the yields of food staples, such as rice and wheat, that Indian agriculture experienced under his stewardship of the ‘green revolution’ in the 20th century. That revolution is credited with saving many people from hunger and malnutrition across Asia and Latin America. And yet, half-a-century on farmers’ incomes in Africa, Asia and Europe are falling and in many countries farmers are on the streets protesting. At the same time, the environmental impacts of intensive food production are becoming increasingly clear. So do we need a new ‘green revolution’? And is the use of the latest agricultural technology, from robots to AI the answer?
Rajan Datar discusses the past and present of food growing with Professor of Economics Douglas Gollin, crop scientist Professor Nigel Halford, historian of science Dr. Madhumita Saha, robotics project manager Andreas Hofland and listeners from around the world.
(Photo: Green ear of wheat. Credit: binabina/iStock/Getty Images Plus)

In February 2024, the renowned Indian geneticist Dr. MS Swaminathan was posthumously awarded the country’s highest civilian honour, the Bharat Ratna. This was in recognition of the dramatic increase in the yields of food staples, such as rice and wheat, that Indian agriculture experienced under his stewardship of the ‘green revolution’ in the 20th century. That revolution is credited with saving many people from hunger and malnutrition across Asia and Latin America. And yet, half-a-century on farmers’ incomes in Africa, Asia and Europe are falling and in many countries farmers are on the streets protesting. At the same time, the environmental impacts of intensive food production are becoming increasingly clear. So do we need a new ‘green revolution’? And is the use of the latest agricultural technology, from robots to AI the answer?
Rajan Datar discusses the past and present of food growing with Professor of Economics Douglas Gollin, crop scientist Professor Nigel Halford, historian of science Dr. Madhumita Saha, robotics project manager Andreas Hofland and listeners from around the world.
(Photo: Green ear of wheat. Credit: binabina/iStock/Getty Images Plus)

49 min

Top Podcasts In Society & Culture

A Better You by Fernanda Ramirez
Fernanda Ramirez
Tonight's Conversation Podcast
Ace Metaphor
Good Moms Bad Choices
Good Moms Bad Choices
Oprah's Super Soul
Oprah
Let's Try This Again with B. Simone
B. Simone
Your Favorite Aunties
ShaMarian Nia

More by BBC

The Martin Lewis Podcast
BBC Radio 5 Live
Lives Less Ordinary
BBC World Service
The Inquiry
BBC World Service
Global News Podcast
BBC World Service
More or Less: Behind the Stats
BBC Radio 4
The Documentary Podcast
BBC World Service