NCERT Solutions for Class 12 Geography Chapter 5: Secondary Activities
These Class 12 Geography Chapter 5 solutions cover Secondary Activities from Fundamentals of Human Geography, the NCERT textbook for the 2026–27 session. Secondary activities add value to natural resources by transforming raw materials into more valuable products — cotton into yarn, iron ore into steel. This chapter explains manufacturing and its characteristics, the factors that influence industrial location (market, raw material, labour, energy, transport, government policy and agglomeration economies), footloose industries, the classification of manufacturing industries by size, inputs, output and ownership, and the concept of high-technology industries and technopolies. Below you get verbatim NCERT exercise questions with full step-by-step answers, key terms, extra practice, MCQs, Assertion–Reason questions and FAQs.
Class 12 Geography Chapter 5 – Overview
All economic activities — primary, secondary, tertiary and quaternary — revolve around obtaining and utilising resources. Secondary activities add value to natural resources by transforming raw materials into valuable products, and are concerned with manufacturing, processing and construction industries. The chapter describes the characteristics of modern large-scale manufacturing — specialisation of skills, mechanisation and automation, technological innovation, a complex organisational structure with division of labour, and an uneven geographic distribution concentrated in a few advanced regions. It examines why industries choose particular locations, listing the factors of access to market, raw material, labour supply, sources of energy, transport and communication, government policy and agglomeration economies. It introduces footloose industries that depend mainly on road accessibility, and classifies manufacturing industries by size (household/cottage, small-scale, large-scale), by inputs (agro-, mineral-, chemical-, forest- and animal-based), by output (basic and consumer-goods industries) and by ownership (public, private and joint sector). Finally it explains high-technology (high-tech) industries, R&D-intensive activities dominated by white-collar professionals, and technopolies such as Silicon Valley.
Key Concepts & Terms
Secondary activities: activities that add value to natural resources by transforming raw materials into more valuable finished products; they include manufacturing, processing and construction (infrastructure) industries.
Manufacturing: the process of transforming raw materials into finished goods of higher value for sale in local or distant markets — literally ‘to make by hand’, but now mainly ‘made by machines’. Its common features are the application of power, mass production of identical products and specialised labour in factory settings.
Manufacturing industry: a geographically located manufacturing unit maintaining books of accounts and records under a management system; the longer term is used to distinguish it from non-factory ‘industries’ such as the entertainment or tourism industry.
Mechanisation & automation: mechanisation is using gadgets to accomplish tasks; automation, where machines work without the aid of human thinking during the process (feedback and closed-loop computer control), is its advanced stage.
Factors of industrial location: access to market, access to raw material, access to labour supply, access to sources of energy, access to transport and communication facilities, government policy and access to agglomeration economies. Industries locate where production costs are minimum.
Agglomeration economies: savings and benefits that industries derive from being located near a leader-industry and other linked industries.
Footloose industries: industries that can be located in a wide variety of places because they do not depend on any specific or weight-losing raw material, use component parts available anywhere, produce in small quantity, employ a small labour force and are generally non-polluting; their key locational need is accessibility by road network.
Basic vs consumer-goods industries: basic industries make products used as raw materials by other industries (e.g. iron and steel); consumer-goods (non-basic) industries make goods consumed directly by consumers (bread, biscuits, soap, paper, televisions).
Ownership categories: public sector (owned and managed by government, e.g. PSUs), private sector (owned by individual investors), and joint sector (managed by joint stock companies or by private and public sectors together).
High-technology (high-tech) industry: the latest generation of manufacturing, based on intensive R&D, making advanced scientific and engineering products; white-collar (professional) workers outnumber blue-collar (production) workers; uses robotics, CAD/CAM and electronic controls.
Technopolies: high-tech industries that are regionally concentrated, self-sustained and highly specialised — for example, Silicon Valley near San Francisco and Silicon Forest near Seattle.
NCERT Exercise — Full Solutions
All questions below are reproduced verbatim from the NCERT textbook’s end-of-chapter Exercises. Answers are original, written in exam-ready style.
1. Choose the right answer from the four alternatives given below.
(i) Which one of the following statements is wrong? (a) Cheap water transport has facilitated the jute mill industry along the Hugli. (b) Sugar, cotton textiles and vegetable oils are footloose industries. (c) The development of hydro-electricity and petroleum reduced, to a great extent, the importance of coal energy as a locational factor for industry. (d) Port towns in India have attracted industries.
(ii) In which one of the following types of economy are the factors of production owned individually? (a) Capitalist (b) Mixed (c) Socialist (d) None
(iii) Which one of the following types of industries produces raw materials for other industries? (a) Cottage Industries (b) Small-scale Industries (c) Basic Industries (d) Footloose Industries
(iv) Which one of the following pairs is correctly matched? (a) Automobile industry … Los Angeles (b) Shipbuilding industry … Lusaka (c) Aircraft industry … Florence
2. Write a short note on the following in about 30 words.
(i) High-Tech industry
(ii) Manufacturing
(iii) Footloose industries
3. Answer the following in not more than 150 words.
(i) Differentiate between primary and secondary activities.
| Basis | Primary activities | Secondary activities |
|---|---|---|
| Nature | Directly extract/obtain resources from Nature | Transform and add value to those resources |
| Examples | Mining, fishing, lumbering, agriculture | Iron and steel, cotton textiles, automobiles |
| Product | Raw materials of lower value | Finished goods of higher value |
| Dependence | Highly dependent on physical environment | Less directly dependent on environment |
(ii) Discuss the major trends of modern industrial activities especially in the developed countries of the world.
(iii) Explain why high-tech industries in many countries are being attracted to the peripheral areas of major metropolitan centres.
(iv) Africa has immense natural resources and yet it is industrially the most backward continent. Comment.
Extra Practice Questions
Short Answer Type Questions
Q1. What are secondary activities concerned with?
Q2. Distinguish between mechanisation and automation.
Q3. Name the factors that influence the location of industries.
Q4. What are agglomeration economies?
Q5. Differentiate between basic and consumer-goods industries.
Long Answer Type Questions
Q1. Classify manufacturing industries on the basis of their inputs or raw materials, with examples.
Q2. Explain any five factors that influence the location of industries.
Q3. Describe the characteristics of modern large-scale manufacturing.
MCQs & Assertion–Reason
1. Secondary activities are concerned with:
(a) gathering and mining (b) manufacturing, processing and construction (c) trade and transport (d) research and development
2. The advanced stage of mechanisation, in which machines work without human thinking during the process, is called:
(a) automation (b) specialisation (c) agglomeration (d) standardisation
3. Which industry is power-intensive and therefore located close to the source of energy?
(a) Cotton textiles (b) Aluminium (c) Sugar (d) Dairy
4. The most important factor in the location of industries is access to:
(a) labour (b) market (c) capital (d) climate
5. The most important locational factor for footloose industries is:
(a) raw material (b) power supply (c) accessibility by road network (d) water
6. The iron and steel industry, which supplies raw material to other industries, is an example of a:
(a) consumer-goods industry (b) basic industry (c) footloose industry (d) cottage industry
7. Industries owned and managed by the government are called:
(a) private sector industries (b) joint sector industries (c) public sector industries (d) cooperative industries
8. The smallest manufacturing unit, using local raw materials and simple tools in the home, is:
(a) large-scale industry (b) small-scale industry (c) household / cottage industry (d) high-tech industry
9. Silicon Valley near San Francisco is an example of a:
(a) traditional industrial region (b) technopolis (c) free trade zone (d) corn belt
10. Major concentrations of modern manufacturing cover less than what share of the world’s land area?
(a) 10 per cent (b) 25 per cent (c) 50 per cent (d) 75 per cent
For each Assertion–Reason question, choose: (A) Both true and the Reason correctly explains the Assertion; (B) Both true but the Reason is not the correct explanation; (C) Assertion true, Reason false; (D) Assertion false, Reason true.
A-R 1. Assertion: Secondary activities add value to natural resources.
Reason: They transform raw materials into more valuable finished products through manufacturing, processing and construction.
A-R 2. Assertion: Footloose industries can be located in a wide variety of places.
Reason: They do not depend on any specific or weight-losing raw material and largely use component parts available anywhere.
A-R 3. Assertion: Sugar and cotton textile industries are footloose industries.
Reason: They are weight-losing, raw-material based industries located close to the source of raw material.
A-R 4. Assertion: In high-tech industries professional (white-collar) workers outnumber production (blue-collar) workers.
Reason: High-tech industry is the application of intensive research and development to make advanced scientific and engineering products.
A-R 5. Assertion: Modern manufacturing is unevenly distributed over the world.
Reason: Major concentrations of manufacturing have flourished in a few places that have become the centres of economic and political power.
Exam Tips & Common Mistakes
How to score full marks in this chapter
Memorise the seven factors of industrial location and be able to give a one-line example for each (market – arms/aircraft; raw material – steel/sugar; energy – aluminium; transport – Western Europe). Learn the five characteristics of modern large-scale manufacturing and the four bases of classification (size, inputs, output, ownership) with examples. For the MCQ on footloose industries, remember they are not weight-losing — sugar, cotton textiles and vegetable oils are not footloose. Use the textbook’s own examples — the Hugli jute mills, Silicon Valley and Silicon Forest technopolies, and the American corn belt comparison — to add depth to long answers.
Common mistakes to avoid
- Calling sugar, cotton textile and vegetable-oil industries “footloose” — they are weight-losing, raw-material based industries.
- Confusing basic industries (supply raw materials to other industries) with consumer-goods industries (used directly by consumers).
- Mixing up mechanisation (using gadgets) with automation (machines work without human thinking).
- Confusing the three ownership sectors — public (government), private (individual investors) and joint (companies / public + private together).
- Forgetting that high-tech industries employ more white-collar than blue-collar workers, and that technopolies are regionally concentrated and self-sustained.
- Writing more than the word limit (30 words for short notes, 150 words for long answers) — stick to the marks.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are secondary activities in Class 12 Geography Chapter 5?
Secondary activities add value to natural resources by transforming raw materials into more valuable finished products. They are concerned with manufacturing, processing and construction (infrastructure) industries — for example, turning cotton into yarn or iron ore into steel.
What are footloose industries?
Footloose industries can be located in a wide variety of places because they do not depend on any specific or weight-losing raw material. They use component parts available anywhere, produce in small quantity, employ a small labour force, are generally non-polluting, and need accessibility by road network.
On what bases are manufacturing industries classified?
Manufacturing industries are classified on the basis of size (household/cottage, small-scale and large-scale), inputs or raw materials (agro-, mineral-, chemical-, forest- and animal-based), output or products (basic and consumer-goods industries), and ownership (public, private and joint sector).
