NCERT Solutions for Class 12 Geography Chapter 6: Planning and Sustainable Development in Indian Context (NCERT 2026–27)
These Class 12 Geography Chapter 6 solutions cover Planning and Sustainable Development in Indian Context from the textbook India – People and Economy (Unit III). The chapter explains the two approaches to planning — sectoral and regional — the target-area and target-group programmes used to develop backward regions, two detailed case studies (the Integrated Tribal Development Project in Bharmaur and the Indira Gandhi Canal Command Area), and the concept of sustainable development with practical measures to achieve it. Below you get every NCERT exercise question answered step by step, plus key terms, extra practice, MCQs, Assertion–Reason and FAQs.
Class 12 Geography Chapter 6 – Overview
Chapter 6, Planning and Sustainable Development in Indian Context, treats ‘planning’ as the conscious process of formulating and implementing schemes to achieve economic development. There are two broad approaches: sectoral planning, aimed at developing sectors such as agriculture, irrigation, manufacturing, power and services, and regional planning, which adopts a spatial perspective to reduce regional imbalances. Because development is uneven over space, the Planning Commission introduced target-area programmes (Command Area Development, Drought-Prone Area, Desert Development, Hill Area Development) and target-group programmes (SFDA, MFDA). The chapter studies two cases — the ITDP in Bharmaur (Himachal Pradesh), which improved literacy, sex ratio and infrastructure for the Gaddi tribe, and the Indira Gandhi Canal Command Area in Rajasthan, where canal irrigation transformed the economy but caused waterlogging and soil salinity. It closes with the idea of sustainable development — development that meets present needs without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own — and measures to make development ecologically, socially and economically sustainable. (Note: from 1 January 2015 the Planning Commission was replaced by the NITI Aayog.)
Key Concepts & Terms
Planning: the conscious process of thinking, formulating a scheme or programme and implementing a set of actions to achieve a development goal — here, the process of economic development.
Sectoral planning: formulation and implementation of schemes aimed at developing various sectors of the economy — agriculture, irrigation, manufacturing, power, construction, transport, communication, social infrastructure and services.
Regional planning: planning that adopts a spatial perspective to reduce regional imbalance in development, since some areas are more developed and others lag behind.
Target-area programmes: schemes directed at developing specific backward areas — Command Area Development Programme, Drought-Prone Area Programme, Desert Development Programme and Hill Area Development Programme.
Target-group programmes: schemes directed at specific groups — the Small Farmers Development Agency (SFDA) and Marginal Farmers Development Agency (MFDA).
Hill Area Development Programme: initiated in the Fifth Five Year Plan; the 1981 National Committee recommended treating all hill areas above 600 m (not under the tribal sub-plan) as backward hill areas, to be developed through horticulture, plantation, animal husbandry, forestry and small-scale industry.
Drought-Prone Area Programme: initiated in the Fourth Five Year Plan to provide employment and create productive assets in drought-prone areas, emphasising integrated watershed development and restoration of ecological balance.
ITDP (Integrated Tribal Development Project): Bharmaur was one of five ITDPs in Himachal Pradesh under the tribal sub-plan (1974), aimed at improving the quality of life of the Gaddi tribe and narrowing the development gap.
Sustainable development: as defined by the Brundtland Report Our Common Future (1987), “development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.”
Indira Gandhi Canal: previously the Rajasthan Canal, conceived by Kanwar Sain (1948), launched on 31 March 1958; it originates at Harike barrage and irrigates the Thar Desert — transforming agriculture but causing waterlogging and soil salinity.
NITI Aayog: formed on 1 January 2015, replacing the Planning Commission, to involve the states in economic policy making and give strategic and technical advice to the Central and State governments.
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 answers of the following from the given options.
(i) Regional planning relates to: (a) Development of various sectors of economy. (b) Area specific approach of development. (c) Area differences in transportation network. (d) Development of rural areas.
(ii) ITDP refers to which one of the following? (a) Integrated Tourism Development Programme (b) Integrated Travel Development Programme (c) Integrated Tribal Development Programme (d) Integrated Transport Development Programme
(iii) Which one of the following is the most crucial factor for sustainable development in Indira Gandhi Canal Command Area? (a) Agricultural development (b) Eco-development (c) Transport development (d) Colonisation of land
2. Answer the following questions in about 30 words.
(i) What are the social benefits of ITDP in the Bharmaur tribal region?
(ii) Define the concept of sustainable development.
(iii) What are the positive impacts of irrigation on Indira Gandhi Canal Command Area?
3. Answer the following questions in about 150 words.
(i) Write short notes on drought-prone area programme. How does this programme help in the development of dryland agriculture in India?
(ii) Suggest the measures of promotion of sustainability in Indira Gandhi Canal Command Area.
Extra Practice Questions
Short Answer Type Questions
Q1. Distinguish between sectoral planning and regional planning.
Q2. Name the four target-area programmes mentioned in the chapter.
Q3. When and why was NITI Aayog formed?
Q4. What are the twin environmental problems caused by intensive irrigation in the Indira Gandhi Canal Command Area?
Q5. Why do resource-rich regions sometimes remain backward?
Long Answer Type Questions
Q1. Describe the Integrated Tribal Development Project (ITDP) in the Bharmaur region and assess its impact.
Q2. Trace the evolution of the concept of development and explain how it led to the idea of sustainable development.
Q3. Discuss how the introduction of canal irrigation transformed the ecology, economy and society of the Indira Gandhi Canal Command Area, both positively and negatively.
MCQs & Assertion–Reason
1. The Planning Commission was replaced by NITI Aayog on:
(a) 1 January 2014 (b) 1 January 2015 (c) 31 March 1958 (d) 21 November 1975
2. Sectoral planning aims at the development of:
(a) specific backward areas (b) various sectors of the economy (c) tribal groups only (d) hill districts only
3. SFDA and MFDA are examples of:
(a) target-area programmes (b) target-group programmes (c) sectoral schemes (d) watershed projects
4. The Bharmaur tribal region is inhabited mainly by which community?
(a) Bhils (b) Santhals (c) Gaddis (d) Todas
5. The Drought-Prone Area Programme was initiated during which Five Year Plan?
(a) Third (b) Fourth (c) Fifth (d) Eighth
6. The Brundtland Report “Our Common Future” was published in:
(a) 1968 (b) 1972 (c) 1987 (d) 2015
7. The Indira Gandhi Canal originates at:
(a) Harike barrage (b) Bhakra dam (c) Pong dam (d) Tehri dam
8. The twin environmental problems caused by intensive irrigation in the canal command area are:
(a) drought and desertification (b) waterlogging and soil salinity (c) deforestation and erosion (d) flooding and silting
9. The Hill Area Development Programme was initiated during the:
(a) Third Five Year Plan (b) Fourth Five Year Plan (c) Fifth Five Year Plan (d) Eighth Five Year Plan
10. The warabandi system refers to:
(a) lining of water courses (b) equal distribution of canal water (c) shelterbelt plantation (d) land levelling
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: Regional planning is needed in India.
Reason: There is no uniform economic development over space, and some areas lag behind others.
A-R 2. Assertion: A resource-rich region always becomes economically developed.
Reason: Economic development requires technology and investment besides resources.
A-R 3. Assertion: The ITDP improved the social conditions of the Gaddis in Bharmaur.
Reason: Female literacy in the region rose from 1.88 per cent in 1971 to 65 per cent in 2011.
A-R 4. Assertion: Intensive canal irrigation in the Indira Gandhi Canal Command Area is fully sustainable.
Reason: Excessive use of water has caused waterlogging and soil salinity in the command area.
A-R 5. Assertion: Eco-development is crucial for sustainability in the canal command area.
Reason: Afforestation, shelterbelt plantation and pasture development help restore ecological balance.
Exam Tips & Common Mistakes
How to score full marks in this chapter
Keep the two approaches to planning (sectoral vs regional) and the target-area vs target-group distinction crisp — examiners love this difference. Memorise key facts and dates: NITI Aayog (1 January 2015), Indira Gandhi Canal launched (31 March 1958, conceived by Kanwar Sain 1948), Brundtland Report (1987), and Bharmaur female literacy (1.88% → 65%). For the two case studies, organise answers under positive and negative/social/economic impacts. When asked for measures in the canal command area, list all seven and note that five aim at ecological balance.
Common mistakes to avoid
- Confusing sectoral planning (sectors of the economy) with regional planning (spatial/area approach).
- Mixing up target-area programmes (CADP, DPAP, DDP, HADP) with target-group programmes (SFDA, MFDA).
- Writing that ITDP stands for “Tourism” or “Transport” — it is the Integrated Tribal Development Programme/Project.
- Forgetting the negative impacts of canal irrigation (waterlogging and soil salinity) and only listing benefits.
- Stating wrong dates — mixing up NITI Aayog (2015) with the canal launch (1958) or the Brundtland Report (1987).
- Giving an incomplete definition of sustainable development — always include “without compromising future generations.”
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Class 12 Geography Chapter 6 about?
Chapter 6, Planning and Sustainable Development in Indian Context, explains sectoral and regional planning, target-area and target-group programmes, two case studies (the ITDP in Bharmaur and the Indira Gandhi Canal Command Area), and the concept of sustainable development with measures to achieve ecological, social and economic sustainability.
What is the difference between sectoral and regional planning?
Sectoral planning develops various sectors of the economy — agriculture, irrigation, manufacturing, power and services. Regional planning takes a spatial, area-specific approach to reduce regional imbalances in development, since growth is uneven over space.
How is sustainable development defined in this chapter?
Following the Brundtland Report Our Common Future (1987), sustainable development is “development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs,” balancing ecological, social and economic aspects.
