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Latest Geography NCERT Notes, Solutions and Extra Q & A (Class 8th to 12th)
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Class 12th Chapters
Fundamentals of Human Geography
1. Human Geography - Nature And Scope 2. The World Population - Distribution, Density And Growth 3. Human Development
4. Primary Activities 5. Secondary Activities 6. Tertiary And Quaternary Activities
7. Transport And Communication 8. International Trade
India - People and Economy
1. Population : Distribution, Density, Growth And Composition 2. Human Settlements 3. Land Resources And Agriculture
4. Water Resources 5. Mineral And Energy Resources 6. Planning And Sustainable Development In Indian Context
7. Transport And Communication 8. International Trade 9. Geographical Perspective On Selected Issues And Problems
Practical Work in Geography
1. Data – Its Source And Compilation 2. Data Processing 3. Graphical Representation Of Data
4. Spatial Information Technology



Chapter 7 Transport and Communication



Transport and Communication

The spatial separation between natural resources, production centers, and markets necessitates systems to connect them. Transport and communication services fulfill this crucial role, establishing vital links that facilitate trade and economic activity. In the modern world, these services have become highly distinct and specialized, essential components supporting mass production, complex exchange systems, and contributing significantly to high living standards and quality of life.

A transport network is formed by joining various places (known as nodes) with a series of routes (referred to as links), creating a interconnected pattern across space.


Introduction

This section provides an overview of the fundamental need for transport and communication in economies where resources and markets are geographically separated. It highlights their role in supporting trade, mass production, and overall quality of life, noting their evolution into distinct and specialized services today. It also defines the concept of a transport network.



Modes Of Transportation

Transportation involves the physical movement of people and goods from one location to another. This movement can occur over land, water, or through the air, utilizing various carriers ranging from humans and animals to complex vehicles. Pipelines are a specialized mode for transporting liquids and gases.

Transport is an organized service industry meeting the need for mobility, comprising routes, vehicles, and the infrastructure/organization for maintenance and handling goods. Efficient transport promotes cooperation and unity among geographically dispersed populations and is vital for defence.

The choice and significance of a particular mode of transport depend on factors like the type of goods (bulky, perishable, valuable), distance, transport costs, and the availability of the mode. A well-managed transport system integrates different modes, allowing them to complement each other for optimal efficiency.

Mode Primary Use Key Advantages Key Disadvantages
Land (Roads) People & goods (short distances, door-to-door) Economical for short haul, flexibility, door-to-door service Costly for long distance/bulky goods, affected by weather/traffic
Land (Railways) Bulky goods & passengers (long distances) Efficient for large volumes over long distances, less affected by weather than roads Fixed routes, not door-to-door, less flexible than roads
Water (Sea/Ocean) Bulky/heavy cargo (inter-continental, long distances) Cheapest for bulky goods over long distances, no route construction needed (oceans) Slow, limited to waterways/coasts, port dependence
Water (Inland Waterways) Bulky cargo (rivers, canals, lakes) Cheaper than land transport for heavy cargo where navigable Limited by navigability of water bodies, seasonal restrictions, competition
Airways Passengers (long distances), valuable/light/perishable cargo, inaccessible areas Fastest, overcomes geographical barriers, global reach Very costly, requires expensive infrastructure, capacity limitations
Pipelines Liquids & gases (uninterrupted flow) Efficient for continuous flow of specific substances, less affected by weather/terrain once built High initial cost, limited to specific materials, fixed route

Land Transport

Historically, land transport evolved from humans carrying loads to using animals, carts, wagons, and eventually mechanized forms like railways and motor vehicles. The invention of the steam engine powered the rise of railways in the 19th century, opening up vast continental interiors. The internal combustion engine revolutionized road transport with improved vehicles and road quality.


Water Transport

Water transport is advantageous because it requires no route construction on existing water bodies, offering cheaper haulage due to lower friction compared to land. It is particularly cost-effective for carrying bulky materials over long distances. Requires providing port facilities at ends.


Air Transport

Air transport is the fastest mode, suitable for long-distance passenger travel and rapid movement of valuable, light, or perishable cargo globally. It is often the only viable option for reaching inaccessible areas, overcoming geographical barriers like mountains or deserts. Air travel has significant strategic importance (e.g., military operations).

The rapid expansion of air networks has led to a connectivity revolution, making travel time between places drastically shorter (e.g., London to New York in hours by supersonic aircraft). However, air transport is very costly, requiring elaborate and expensive infrastructure like hangars, fuelling facilities, maintenance support, and airports. Airport development is concentrated in highly industrialised countries with large traffic volumes.

Aeroplane at Salsburg Airport

Inter-Continental Air Routes

The Northern Hemisphere has a prominent east-west belt of inter-continental air routes, with dense networks in Eastern USA, Western Europe, and Southeast Asia. The USA has the most extensive network, accounting for a majority of world airways. Major airports like New York, London, Paris, Tokyo, etc., serve as crucial nodal points connecting routes across continents. Areas with sparser populations, limited landmass, and lower economic development (e.g., Africa, Asiatic Russia, South America, and the Southern Hemisphere) have fewer air services.

Map showing major airports and air routes

Pipelines

Pipelines are extensively used for the continuous and uninterrupted flow of liquids and gases. Common substances transported include water (familiar for domestic supply), petroleum, and natural gas (LPG). They can also transport liquidified coal or, in specific cases like New Zealand, milk from farms to factories.

The USA has a dense network of oil pipelines. Europe, Russia, West Asia, and India also use pipelines to connect oil wells, refineries, ports, and markets. International pipelines like Turkmenistan's links to Iran and China, and the proposed Iran-India pipeline, transport energy resources across borders.

Pipelines transporting natural gas in Ukraine


The Foreign Exchange Market

So far, we have looked at international transactions in aggregate. Now we will consider a single transaction and the concept of foreign exchange required to complete it. When individuals or entities in one country want to purchase goods, services, or assets from another country, they need the currency of that foreign country. The market where national currencies are traded is called the foreign exchange market.


Foreign Exchange Rate

The Foreign Exchange Rate (Forex Rate) is the price of one currency in terms of another. For example, if $\textsf{₹}80$ is needed to buy one US Dollar, the exchange rate is $\textsf{₹}80/$ or $\$1/\textsf{₹}80 = \$0.0125/\textsf{₹}.$ The exchange rate links the currencies of different countries and allows for the comparison of international costs and prices.


Demand For Foreign Exchange

People in a country demand foreign exchange when they need to make payments to residents of other countries. Reasons include:

The demand for foreign exchange is generally inversely related to the exchange rate. If the exchange rate (price of foreign currency) rises, foreign goods and services become more expensive in domestic currency terms, reducing demand for imports and thus reducing the demand for foreign exchange, ceteris paribus.


Supply Of Foreign Exchange

Foreign currency flows into a country (supply of foreign exchange) when residents of foreign countries make payments to residents of the home country. Reasons include:

The supply of foreign exchange is generally positively related to the exchange rate. If the exchange rate rises, domestic goods and services become cheaper for foreigners in their currency terms, potentially increasing exports and thus increasing the supply of foreign exchange, ceteris paribus (though the exact effect depends on the price elasticity of demand for exports).


Determination Of The Exchange Rate

The method by which a country's exchange rate is determined falls into different categories: Flexible, Fixed, or Managed Floating.


Flexible Exchange Rate

In a Flexible Exchange Rate System (also known as Floating Exchange Rate System), the exchange rate is determined solely by the free interaction of demand and supply for the currency in the foreign exchange market. Central banks do not intervene to influence the rate.

Graph showing equilibrium exchange rate where demand and supply intersect

The equilibrium exchange rate is set where the demand curve for foreign currency intersects the supply curve. If demand increases (shifts right), the exchange rate rises. If supply increases (shifts right), the exchange rate falls.

In a flexible system, an increase in the exchange rate (price of foreign currency in domestic currency) is called Depreciation of the domestic currency. A decrease in the exchange rate is called Appreciation of the domestic currency.

Graph showing rightward shift of demand for foreign exchange causing depreciation of domestic currency

Speculation

Expectations about future exchange rate movements drive speculation. If speculators anticipate a foreign currency will appreciate, they will buy it now, increasing current demand and potentially causing the expected appreciation to happen sooner. If they expect it to depreciate, they will sell it now, increasing current supply.


Interest Rates And The Exchange Rate

Differences in interest rates between countries (interest rate differentials) influence short-term capital flows. Higher interest rates in a country attract foreign investors, increasing demand for that country's currency and leading to its appreciation, as funds flow in seeking higher returns.


Income And The Exchange Rate

An increase in domestic income typically leads to increased demand for imports, increasing demand for foreign currency and causing the domestic currency to depreciate. Conversely, an increase in foreign income boosts demand for exports, increasing the supply of foreign currency and potentially appreciating the domestic currency. The overall effect depends on relative income growth rates and the sensitivity of trade to income.


Exchange Rates In The Long Run

The Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) Theory suggests that in the long run, exchange rates between two countries should adjust to equalize the price of a common basket of goods in both countries. This implies that long-run exchange rates reflect differences in national price levels. A country with higher inflation is expected to see its currency depreciate according to PPP.


Fixed Exchange Rates

In a Fixed Exchange Rate System, the government or central bank sets the exchange rate at a specific level and actively intervenes in the foreign exchange market (buying or selling foreign currency) to maintain this pegged rate. If market forces would push the rate above the fixed level (excess demand for foreign currency), the central bank sells foreign currency from reserves. If market forces would push it below (excess supply), the central bank buys foreign currency, accumulating reserves.

Graph showing fixed exchange rate above and below equilibrium with intervention zones

Devaluation And Revaluation

In a fixed exchange rate system:


Merits And Demerits Of Flexible And Fixed Exchange Rate Systems

Each system has trade-offs:


Managed Floating

Most countries use a hybrid system called Managed Floating (or "dirty floating"). The exchange rate is primarily market-determined, but the central bank intervenes occasionally to moderate excessive fluctuations or guide the rate, without targeting a specific fixed level. This system blends market determination with central bank discretion.



Communications

Communications services involve transmitting information, messages, and ideas across distances. Historically linked closely with transport, electronic technologies have revolutionized communication, making it faster and less reliant on physical movement for immediate transmission.


Satellite Communication

Satellite communication emerged significantly in the 1970s. Artificial satellites placed in Earth's orbit connect even remote areas globally. They have made the cost and time of communication largely independent of distance, meaning sending a message over 500 km costs the same as over 5,000 km via satellite. India has made notable contributions to satellite development (Aryabhatt, Bhaskar, Rohini, APPLE, INSAT), enhancing long-distance communication, television, radio, and weather forecasting.


Cyber Space – Internet

Cyberspace is the realm of electronic computer networks, primarily encompassed by the Internet and the World Wide Web (WWW). It is a digital space for communicating and accessing information without the physical movement of people or paper. The Internet has seen unprecedented growth, connecting billions of people worldwide, with a significant shift in user base towards developing countries in recent years.

The Internet, along with fax, television, and radio, allows information to be accessed across geographical barriers and time zones, expanding the economic and social space of humans through applications like e-mail, e-commerce, e-learning, and e-governance. Modern communication systems, particularly the Internet, have been instrumental in making the concept of a "global village" a reality.