GRAM-2026 to Open New Avenues for Investors, Says Rajasthan CM

Rajasthan Chief Minister Bhajan Lal Sharma invited investors to the Global Rajasthan Agritech Meet (GRAM-2026) in Hyderabad, emphasizing the state's potential in Agri-Tech, food processing, and value-added industries. He highlighted Rajasthan's shift from traditional farming to a global hub for agro-based industries, supported by infrastructure projects in water and energy. The state aims to accelerate investment and innovation, with MoUs worth over Rs 200 crore signed during the event. Sharma also praised Rajasthan-origin entrepreneurs and outlined welfare schemes for farmers, including subsidies and solar pump installations.

Key Points: GRAM-2026: Rajasthan Opens New Avenues for Investors

  • Rajasthan CM invites investors to GRAM-2026 in Jaipur
  • Focus on Agri-Tech, food processing, and innovation
  • State invests in water and energy infrastructure for farmers
  • MoUs worth Rs 200 crore signed for food parks and seed production
3 min read

GRAM-2026 to open new avenues for investors: Rajasthan CM​

Rajasthan CM Bhajan Lal Sharma invites investors to GRAM-2026, highlighting opportunities in Agri-Tech, food processing, and sustainable farming in Jaipur.

"Rajasthan is actively working towards becoming a global hub for agro-based industries and food processing. - Bhajan Lal Sharma"

Jaipur, May 8

Rajasthan Chief Minister Bhajan Lal Sharma addressed an Investors' Meet organised in Hyderabad on Friday as part of the upcoming Global Rajasthan Agritech Meet 2026.​

Extending a warm invitation to investors, Agri-Tech startups and industry leaders with the traditional greeting "Padharo Mharo Desh", he said GRAM-2026 would serve as a major platform for investment opportunities and partnerships in Rajasthan's growth journey.​

"Rajasthan is actively working towards becoming a global hub for agro-based industries and food processing," Sharma said.​

He added that Rajasthan has moved far beyond traditional farming practices and is rapidly emerging as a land of immense opportunities in Agri-Tech, food processing and value-added agricultural industries.​

Owing to the state's diverse agricultural output, Rajasthan offers significant investment potential in sectors such as food processing, cold chains, spice parks, seed production and agro-based industries.​

"The state government is fully prepared to work shoulder-to-shoulder with investors," he said.​

Highlighting Hyderabad's success in innovation and agriculture technology, Sharma remarked that the city's "Lab-to-Land" ecosystem, encompassing Agri-Tech startups, drone technology, precision farming and food processing, serves as an inspiration for Rajasthan.​

He said the state intends to adopt and expand such models on a larger scale.​

The Chief Minister also praised the contributions of Rajasthan-origin entrepreneurs settled in Hyderabad, stating that the Marwari community has earned nationwide recognition for its enterprise, social commitment, and cultural roots.​

Referring to GRAM-2026, scheduled to be held in Jaipur from May 23 to 25, Sharma said the event would bring together farmers, academicians, agribusiness leaders, policymakers and technology experts on a common platform to deliberate on the future of agriculture and food processing through innovation-driven approaches.​

Emphasising that water and energy are fundamental to farmers' prosperity, he said the government has prepared a comprehensive roadmap for irrigation, drinking water supply and power management.​

Initiatives such as the Ramjal Setu Link Project, Yamuna Water Agreement, modernisation of the Indira Gandhi Canal and Ganganahar, and the expansion of the Dewas Project are being implemented to strengthen water infrastructure.​

The Chief Minister further said Rajasthan aims to become self-reliant in the energy sector.​

Daytime electricity supply has already been implemented in 24 districts, and the government remains committed to providing uninterrupted power to farmers and industries by 2027.​

He added that more than 65,000 solar pump systems have been installed under various schemes, with subsidies exceeding Rs 1,000 crore already disbursed to farmers.​

Sharma also highlighted welfare initiatives for farmers, including the Rs 9,000 annual assistance provided under the PM Kisan Samman Nidhi scheme, funded by combined support from the Central and state governments.​

Farmers are also benefiting from Minimum Support Price procurement, crop insurance schemes, livestock insurance programmes and the Gopalak Card Scheme.​

Speaking on investment growth, the Chief Minister said the state has already witnessed investments worth Rs 9,391 crore materialise in the agriculture sector following the Rising Rajasthan Global Investment Summit.​

Through GRAM-2026, Rajasthan now aims to further accelerate investment, innovation and technology adoption in the agriculture sector.​

During the event, Memorandums of Understanding worth over Rs 200 crore were signed for projects related to food parks, seed production, and the food processing industry.​

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Vikram M
While the intent is good, I'm cautiously optimistic. We've seen many summits and MoUs in the past, but ground-level implementation often lags. The Rs 200 crore MoUs signed are a start, but let's see if these actually lead to functional food parks and cold chains. The focus on water projects like Ramjal Setu is crucial—without water security, no agri-tech can thrive.
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Arjun K
This is exactly what Rajasthan needs! Being from a farming family in Bikaner, I've seen how traditional methods are becoming unsustainable. The mention of drone technology and precision farming gives me hope. Also, 65,000 solar pumps installed—that's actually impressive for a state with so much sunlight. Kudos to the government for thinking beyond just subsidies. 🌾🚀
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Michael C
Interesting to see Rajasthan positioning itself as an agri-tech hub. I work in agri-business in the US, and the "Lab-to-Land" approach they're copying from Hyderabad is a proven model. The challenge will be scaling it across a state as large and arid as Rajasthan. The Yamuna water agreement sounds promising, but inter-state water sharing is always tricky. Hoping for the best!
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Siddharth J
I appreciate the push for energy self-reliance and daytime electricity for farmers. That's a game-changer for irrigation. But I wish the article had more details on how small and marginal farmers will benefit directly. Big corporates often capture the benefits of such summits. The Gopalak Card Scheme for livestock is a nice touch though—Rajasthan's dairy sector is underrated. 🐄
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Rachel V
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