Scientific Publications Fields on fire: Alternatives to crop residue burning in India Published 2019 Share SHARE Facebook share Twitter LinkedIn Copy URL Email Download Download Fields-on-Fire.pdf en Added on: 25 November, 2025 Breadcrumb Home Resource Library Fields On Fire: Alternatives To Crop Residue Burning In India Although intentional use of fires to transform land has decreased globally, particularly among highly capitalized countries through regulatory and market-oriented approaches and moral suasion, regulatory strategies have been less effective in southern and eastern Asia (see table S21). Some densely populated agricultural regions in China and India buck the global trend, showing increases in agricultural fires. This is particularly true in northwestern India, where rice residue burning makes a substantial contribution to air pollution and short-lived climate pollutants. Regulations are in place to reduce agricultural fires, but burning continues because of uncertainty regarding policy implementation and regarding access and returns to alternative technologies. Authors synthesize emerging evidence on alternatives toburning, clarify the business case for alternative practices, identify remaining uncertainties, and discuss approaches to increase their widespread adoption. Often, there are difficult trade-offs between environmental improvement and profitable economic opportunities. The case of crop residue management in northwestern India does not appear to fit this pattern and provides lessons that may be useful elsewhere.