The decision was taken by the state cabinet and an amount of Rs 500 crore has also been cleared for the purpose, state Parliamentary Affairs and Higher Education Minister Partha Chatterjee said here today.
The project work would start immediately with a target to make an additional 50,000 hectares of non-arable land fit for agriculture, he said.
Besides focusing on efficient use of arable lands through better crop management technologies in the drought-prone areas, the programme aimed at environmental protection and restoration of ecological balance through appropriate natural resource management technologies, Chatterjee said.