When Rajesh Verma, Chairman of the Commission for Air Quality Management (CAQM), recently visited the Rajpura Thermal Plant, he wasn’t there to give warnings or impose fines. He went to recognize something extraordinary—Punjab’s farmers are leading what he calls the “stubble revolution.” Punjab’s farmers have become protectors of the environment along with being food providers, because they are now choosing alternatives to burning stubble.
The numbers tell the story of a remarkable change. In 2021, Punjab recorded 71,300 incidents of stubble burning. By 2024, this number dropped to just 10,900—a reduction of 85%. This year, the state has seen only 3,284 incidents so far, a trend suggesting that Punjab is writing a new chapter on agricultural sustainability.
But this isn’t just about numbers. It’s about a fundamental shift in how Punjab’s farming community sees its role in the country’s environmental future.
“Rice straw has now become a source of income for farmers,” Verma said during his visit. What was once considered waste—quickly burned to clear fields—is now being converted into biomass fuel for thermal plants, contributing to the next chapter of the green revolution.
The Commission chief’s visit to the Rajpura Plant to review biomass mixing with coal highlighted a bigger truth: Punjab’s farmers are no longer just growing crops. They are growing solutions. The state’s aggressive efforts toward the biomass-coal mixing initiative have created new income sources for farming families while addressing one of North India’s most serious environmental challenges.
This transformation didn’t happen overnight. It required significant investment in biomass collection infrastructure, education initiatives to help farmers understand alternative uses for crop residue, and government support to make these alternatives economically viable. The Aam Aadmi Party government’s focused approach to this challenge has created a model that other states are now studying.
The contrast with neighboring regions is clear. While Punjab’s air quality has improved remarkably, Delhi continues struggling with pollution despite various administrative measures. The difference? Punjab addressed the problem at its source, working with farmers, not against them.
“This year’s sharp decline in stubble burning incidents compared to last season shows how farmers are leading the ‘stubble revolution,’” Verma emphasized. His words carry weight—this is the head of the central government’s main air quality body acknowledging that real change comes from ground-level action, not just top-down orders.
For Punjab’s farmers, this represents something much deeper than environmental compliance. It’s a reclaiming of their identity as protectors of the land, as innovators who can adapt to changing times while maintaining their agricultural heritage. The “stubble revolution” is proving that environmental responsibility and agricultural prosperity aren’t opposing forces—they are complementary goals.
As the Diwali festival approached and Punjab’s skies remained clearer compared to previous years, the state’s farmers gave North India an early gift: proof that when communities are empowered with alternatives and support, they choose the path that benefits everyone.
This is Punjab’s story—a story of transformation, responsibility, and leadership. And it’s being written by the people who feed the country.
