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Govt allocates Rs 2,200 cr to boost agri output

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Press Trust of India New Delhi

Aiming to control price rise in non-cereal food items, the government today announced a budget outlay of Rs 2,200 crore to boost production of vegetables, pulses, oilseeds, millets and fodder.

The government also decided to continue the existing two schemes -- one for Green Revolution in eastern states with an allocation of Rs 400 crore and the other to promote pulses' output scheme with an outlay of Rs 300 crore.

In his 2011-12 Budget speech, Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee announced Rs 300 crore each for new schemes to step up production of vegetables, oil palm, nutri-cereals, protein supplements and fodder.

 

"The recent spurt in food prices was driven by increase in prices of items like fruits and vegetables, milk, meat, poultry and fish, which account for more than 70% of the WPI basket for primary food items.

Removal of production and distribution bottlenecks for these items will be the focus of my attention this year," Mukherjee said.

He added that food inflation on average has declined but it still remains a concern.

For early take off of new schemes, the Finance Minister said the budget allocation have been made under the ongoing Rashtriya Krishi Vikas Yojana (RKVY), which incentivises states to invest in farm sector and achieve four% growth.

"The total allocation of RKVY is being increased from Rs 6,755 crore in 2010-11 to Rs 7,860 crore in 2011-12," he said.

On pulses, Mukherjee said although production has risen by nearly two million tonnes in 2010-11, "we must strive to attain self-sufficiency in production of pulses within the next 3 years."

To further increase production, he proposed to provide Rs 300 crore to promote 60,000 pulses villages in rain-fed areas.

Production is expected to touch a record 16.5 million tonnes this year against 14.66 million tonnes last year.

Concerned over costlier imports of cooking oils, he said "We have to pay special attention to oil palm as it is one of the most efficient oil crops" and made budgetary allocation of Rs 300 crore to bring 60,000 hectares under palm plantation by integrating the farmers with the markets.

"The initiative will yield about 3 lakh metric tonnes of palm oil annually in 5 years," he added.

The domestic production of edible oil meets only about 50% demand. The gap is met through imports.

To meet growing demands of vegetables, Mukherjee stressed on the need to establish an efficient supply chain to provide quality vegetables at competitive prices and announced Rs 300 crore to set up a vegetable cluster.

To begin with, this programme will be launched near major urban centres, he added.

The Finance Minister also made a provision of Rs 300 to enhance production of nutri-cereals like bajra, jowar, ragi and other millets.

"The programme (on nutri-cereals) would be taken up in 1,000 compact blocks covering about 25,000 villages. This will help improve nutritional security and increase feed and fodder supply for livestock," he said.

Mukherjee also announced a new scheme 'National Mission for Protein Supplements' with an outlay of Rs 300 crore "to promote animal-based protein production through livestock development, dairy farming, piggery, goat rearing and fisheries in selected blocks."

In order to maintain an adequate supply of fodder for sustained milk production, he proposed to provide a budget of Rs 300 crore for fodder development in 25,000 villages.

Expressing concerns over deteriorating soil health due to indiscriminate use of chemical fertilizers, Mukherjee said the government will promote organic farming.

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First Published: Feb 28 2011 | 2:49 PM IST

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