PUNE :
UNION Agriculture Minister
Shivraj Singh Chouhan on
Tuesday emphasised the need
to increase per hectare farm
income and said the Centre is giving push to the horticulture sector through its ‘Clean Plant
Programme’ which will cover
Maharashtra also.
An Agriculture Minister’s work
isn’t considered complete until
he visits farmers’ fields, insisted
Chouhan.
The Minister of Agriculture
and Farmers Welfare along with
Maharashtra Chief Minister
Devendra Fadnavis and his
Deputy Ajit Pawar attended
India’s first international agriculture hackathon, organised by
the state Government in Pune.
Speaking at the event,
Chouhan said, “The Central
Government is launching the
Clean Plant Programme (CPP).
As part of this scheme we will set
up nine plants across the country. Of these, three plants will
come up in Maharashtra, for
which the Centre will spend Rs
300 crore.
In Maharashtra, these
plants will be located in Pune,
Nagpur and Solapur districts.”
The CPP aims to enhance the
quality and productivity of fruit
crops across the country. The
programme is designed to
address critical issues in horticulture by providing access to
high-quality, virus-free planting
material to farmers regardless of
their landholding size.
“Prime Minister Narendra
Modi has envisioned a developed India (by 2047). There is a
need to increase per hectare agricultural income. An Agriculture
Minister’s work cannot be considered complete until he visits
farmers’ fields. Let us make the
‘Viksit Krishi Sankalp Abhiyan’ a
success,” Chouhan averred.