NCERT Solutions for Class 12 Geography Chapter 7: Transport and Communication
These Class 12 Geography Chapter 7 solutions cover Transport and Communication from India: People and Economy (Unit IV), the NCERT textbook for the 2026–27 session. The chapter explains how goods, people and ideas move across India through land transport (roads and railways), water transport (inland waterways and oceanic routes), air transport and oil and gas pipelines, and how communication networks — personal, mass and satellite — bind the country together. Below you get every NCERT exercise question reproduced verbatim with step-by-step, exam-ready answers, plus key terms, extra practice, MCQs, Assertion–Reason and FAQs.
Class 12 Geography Chapter 7 – Overview
Chapter 7, Transport and Communication, studies the means that move goods, people and ideas from the place of their production to the place of their use. Under land transport, India has one of the largest road networks in the world (about 62.16 lakh km), classified as National Highways, State Highways, District Roads and Rural Roads, supported by projects like the Golden Quadrilateral, the North–South and East–West Corridors and Bharatmala Pariyojana. Indian Railways, introduced in 1853 (Bombay to Thane), is divided into 17 zones and carries both freight and passengers on broad, metre and narrow gauge. Water transport is the cheapest mode, split into inland waterways (National Waterways) and oceanic routes served by 12 major ports. Air transport is the fastest mode, while oil and gas pipelines move liquids and gases efficiently over long distances. The chapter closes with communication networks — personal (internet), mass (radio, television) and satellite (INSAT and IRS) — that have revolutionised the exchange of information.
Key Concepts & Terms
Transport: the means by which material goods, commodities and people are carried from the site of production or availability to the place of use or consumption.
Communication: the process of exchanging ideas, views and messages from one place or individual to another; modern means include post, telegraph, telephone, internet and satellites.
National Highways (NH): main roads built and maintained by the Central Government for inter-state transport and the movement of defence men and material; they are only about 2 per cent of total road length but carry about 40 per cent of road traffic. NHAI (1995) develops and maintains them.
Golden Quadrilateral: a 5,846-km, 4/6-lane high-density corridor connecting Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai and Kolkata.
North–South & East–West Corridors: N–S connects Srinagar to Kanniyakumari (with Cochin–Salem spur); E–W connects Silchar (Assam) to Porbandar (Gujarat).
Railway gauges: broad gauge (1.676 m), metre gauge (1 m) and narrow gauge (0.762 m or 0.610 m, mostly in hilly areas). The railway system is divided into 17 zones.
National Waterways (NW): inland water routes declared for development — e.g. NW 1 (Prayagraj–Haldia on the Ganga), NW 2 (Sadiya–Dhubri on the Brahmaputra), NW 3 (Kottapuram–Kollam, West Coast Canal).
Oceanic routes: sea routes along India’s 7,517-km coastline served by 12 major and about 200 minor ports; about 95 per cent of foreign trade by volume moves through them.
Pipelines: the most convenient mode for moving liquids and gases (and slurry) over long distances; key examples are the OIL Naharkatiya–Barauni–Kanpur pipeline and the GAIL Hazira–Vijaipur–Jagdishpur (HVJ) gas pipeline.
Satellite systems: INSAT (1983) for telecommunication and meteorology, and IRS (operational from 1988) for remote sensing of natural resources; NRSC at Hyderabad processes the data.
NCERT Exercises — 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) In how many zones has the Indian Railways system been divided? (a) 9 (b) 12 (c) 17 (d) 14
(ii) On which river and between which two places does the National Water Way No. 1 lie? (a) The Brahmaputra, Sadiya-Dhubri (b) The Ganga, Haldia–Prayagraj (c) West Coast Canal, Kottapuram to Kollam (d) Godavari–Kakinada Puducherry
(iii) In which of the following year, the first radio programme was broadcast? (a) 1911 (b) 1936 (c) 1927 (d) 1923
2. Answer the following questions in about 30 words.
(i) Which activity does transportation convey? Name three major modes of transportation.
(ii) Discuss advantages and disadvantages of pipeline transportation.
(iii) What do you mean by ‘communication’?
3. Answer the following questions in about 150 words.
(i) Which are the chief means of transportation in India? Discuss the factors affecting their development.
(ii) Give a detailed account of the development of railways in India and highlight their importance.
(iii) Describe the role of roads in the economic development of India.
Extra Practice Questions
Short Answer Type Questions
Q1. What are National Highways, and how important are they to road traffic?
Q2. Name the three categories of railway gauges with the distance between their rails.
Q3. Why is water transport considered the cheapest mode of transport?
Q4. What is the Border Roads Organisation (BRO) and what does it do?
Q5. Distinguish between the two satellite systems used in India.
Long Answer Type Questions
Q1. Explain the classification of India’s road network and the major road development projects.
Q2. Describe the development of oil and gas pipelines in India.
Q3. Discuss the various modes of communication in India.
MCQs & Assertion–Reason
1. About what percentage of freight traffic is carried by roads every year in India?
(a) 40% (b) 70% (c) 85% (d) 95%
2. The Golden Quadrilateral connects which four metro cities?
(a) Delhi–Mumbai–Chennai–Kolkata (b) Delhi–Jaipur–Pune–Patna (c) Mumbai–Surat–Kochi–Goa (d) Delhi–Lucknow–Bhopal–Nagpur
3. The first railway line in India (1853) was laid between:
(a) Howrah and Delhi (b) Bombay and Thane (c) Madras and Bangalore (d) Roha and Mangalore
4. The distance between rails in broad gauge is:
(a) 1.000 m (b) 0.762 m (c) 1.676 m (d) 0.610 m
5. The North–South Corridor connects Srinagar with:
(a) Porbandar (b) Silchar (c) Kanniyakumari (d) Kolkata
6. The Konkan Railway provides a direct link between:
(a) Mumbai and Mangaluru (b) Delhi and Mumbai (c) Chennai and Kochi (d) Goa and Bengaluru
7. Approximately what is the length of India’s coastline (including islands)?
(a) 5,846 km (b) 7,517 km (c) 14,500 km (d) 18,500 km
8. The HVJ gas pipeline was constructed by:
(a) ONGC (b) OIL (c) GAIL (India) Ltd. (d) IOCL
9. INSAT, India’s multipurpose satellite system, was established in:
(a) 1972 (b) 1983 (c) 1988 (d) 1995
10. The National Highways Authority of India (NHAI) was operationalised in:
(a) 1986 (b) 1990 (c) 1995 (d) 2000
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: National Highways carry a large share of road traffic.
Reason: Though National Highways are only about 2 per cent of total road length, they carry about 40 per cent of road traffic.
A-R 2. Assertion: Narrow gauge railway lines are generally confined to hilly areas.
Reason: The distance between rails in narrow gauge is 1.676 metre.
A-R 3. Assertion: Water transport is the cheapest means of transport in India.
Reason: It needs no construction of a track and is most suitable for carrying heavy and bulky material.
A-R 4. Assertion: Pipelines are a convenient mode for transporting solids over long distances.
Reason: Even solids can be transported by pipelines after converting them into slurry.
A-R 5. Assertion: Air transport is essential for a vast country like India.
Reason: Air transport is the fastest means of movement and reduces distances by minimising travel time.
Exam Tips & Common Mistakes
How to score full marks in this chapter
Memorise the key numbers — road network (62.16 lakh km), 17 railway zones, gauge distances (1.676 m / 1 m / 0.762 m), coastline (7,517 km), 12 major ports, and the road-traffic shares (85% passenger, 70% freight; NH = 2% length but 40% traffic). For 150-word answers, structure them with clear headings (development / importance, advantages / disadvantages, factors) and back each point with a textbook example such as the Golden Quadrilateral, Konkan Railway, NW 1, the HVJ pipeline, INSAT and IRS. Always name dates accurately (railways 1853, radio 1923, INSAT 1983).
Common mistakes to avoid
- Saying Indian Railways has 16 or 18 zones — the textbook states 17 zones.
- Confusing NW 1 (Ganga, Prayagraj–Haldia) with NW 2 (Brahmaputra, Sadiya–Dhubri).
- Mixing up gauge widths — broad gauge is 1.676 m, not 1 m.
- Writing 1936 for the first radio broadcast — broadcasting began in 1923; 1936 is when it became All India Radio.
- Forgetting to give both advantages and disadvantages when the question asks for both (pipelines).
- Confusing INSAT (telecommunication/meteorology) with IRS (remote sensing of resources).
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Chapter 7 of Class 12 Geography (India: People and Economy) about?
Chapter 7, Transport and Communication, explains how goods, people and ideas move across India through land transport (roads and railways), water transport (inland waterways and oceanic routes), air transport and oil and gas pipelines, and how personal, mass and satellite communication networks connect the country.
Into how many zones is the Indian Railways divided?
Because of its very large size, the Indian Railways system is divided into 17 zones, each with its own headquarters — for example Northern Railway (New Delhi), Central Railway (Mumbai CST) and Southern Railway (Chennai).
On which river does National Waterway No. 1 lie?
National Waterway No. 1 lies on the Ganga, along the Prayagraj–Haldia stretch of about 1,620 km. It is one of the most important waterways in India and is navigable by mechanical boats up to Patna.
