The roadmaps had been launched throughout the second day of the three-day-long ‘Unnat Krishi Mahotsav’ being held in Raisen district of Madhya Pradesh. Shivraj is a six-time legislator from the Budhni Meeting constituency, which is a part of the Vidisha parliamentary constituency, and a six-time MP from Vidisha. Raisen district is a part of the Vidisha parliamentary constituency.
The honest, which was inaugurated by Defence Minister Rajnath Singh yesterday and can see participation from Transport Minister Nitin Gadkari on the concluding session tomorrow, has seen the participation of a number of agriculture tools, seed and enter corporations, farmers, scientists, agronomists and authorities officers.
It has been divided over three days, spanning greater than 20 periods masking all facets of Indian agriculture.
Chouhan, whereas unveiling the roadmaps, mentioned that the main target should shift from merely rising output to adopting the “proper crops” and sustainable practices tailor-made to native agro-climatic situations. He urged farmers to diversify past conventional crops equivalent to wheat, paddy and soybean, and combine allied actions together with animal husbandry, horticulture, beekeeping and natural farming to boost incomes.
The district-specific plans emphasise environment friendly water use, crop diversification, climate-resilient agriculture and improved market linkages. With groundwater depletion rising as a priority in elements of those districts, the roadmap prioritises water conservation and useful resource optimisation.
The minister highlighted the potential of high-value crops equivalent to tomato, onion, garlic, capsicum and fruits like pomegranate, alongside newer choices equivalent to dragon fruit and avocado.
A key part of the roadmap is the event of ‘seed villages’ on the block degree to make sure entry to high-quality seeds.
Chouhan mentioned that establishing round 10 such villages per block may increase productiveness by as much as 20 per cent. The initiative will likely be supported by means of central and state schemes, with technical backing from the Indian Council of Agricultural Analysis (ICAR).
To deal with mechanisation gaps, Chouhan proposed scaling up customized hiring centres and ‘machine banks’ on the panchayat degree, enabling small farmers to hire tools at inexpensive charges.
Chouhan mentioned the initiative could be prolonged to all districts of Madhya Pradesh, with convergence of central and state schemes to make sure efficient implementation on the bottom.










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