Jaipur Agri Meet Sets 3 Goals: Food Security, Farmer Income, Nutritious Food

Union Agriculture Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan stated that the regional agricultural conference in Jaipur centered on three primary objectives: ensuring food security, increasing farmers' income, and providing nutritious food. A six-point strategy was discussed to achieve these goals, focusing on boosting production, cutting costs, ensuring fair prices, and promoting modern technologies like AI. The minister emphasized reducing import dependency, particularly for pulses and oilseeds, and adopting region-specific integrated farming systems. The conference concluded with an agreement to prepare a joint roadmap for the upcoming agricultural season through enhanced Centre-state coordination.

Key Points: Jaipur Agri Conference Focuses on Food Security & Farmer Income

  • Ensure national food security
  • Increase farmers' income
  • Provide nutritious food
  • Adopt modern tech & natural farming
  • Reduce import dependency on pulses
3 min read

"Jaipur agri meet focuses on food security, farmers' income, and nutritious food": Shivraj Singh Chouhan

Union Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan outlines a six-point strategy from the regional agricultural conference to boost farm income and ensure food security.

"The objective is to strengthen the agriculture sector... increase farmers' income, and ensure food security. - Shivraj Singh Chouhan"

Jaipur, April 7

Union Agriculture Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan said on Tuesday that the regional agricultural conference in Jaipur focused on three key objectives: ensuring food security, increasing farmers' income, and providing nutritious food to citizens. The Centre and states will work together to prepare a comprehensive roadmap to achieve these targets and strengthen the agriculture sector in the country.

He also plants a sapling under the 'Ek Ped Maa Ke Naam' initiative ahead of the regional conference.

Speaking to ANI, the Union Minister said, "The objective is to strengthen the agriculture sector in the country, increase farmers' income, and ensure food security. A comprehensive strategy has been discussed, and a roadmap will be prepared through coordination between the Centre and the states."

He outlined three key goals identified during the conference. "First, to ensure food security so that our food reserves remain full. Second, to increase farmers' income and improve their standard of living. Third, to provide nutritious food to citizens and contribute to global food supply when required," he said.

To achieve these targets, Chouhan said a six-point strategy was discussed. "These include increasing agricultural production, reducing input costs, ensuring fair prices for farmers' produce, compensating losses due to natural disasters, promoting diversification in agriculture, and encouraging modern technologies," he stated.

Highlighting the need to reduce import dependency, he added, "There is a need to increase production of pulses and oilseeds, as we still depend on imports to meet demand."

The minister also stressed the role of innovation in farming. "Special emphasis has been laid on natural farming, modern agricultural practices, and the use of technologies like artificial intelligence and machine learning," he said.

Chouhan further noted that integrated farming systems and region-specific strategies were discussed. "We must adopt integrated farming and select crops, seed varieties, and techniques based on agro-climatic conditions," he added.

"At the end of the conference, it was agreed to prepare a joint roadmap for the upcoming agricultural season, focusing on increasing production, managing risks, and ensuring farmers' income," Chouhan said.

He also pointed out that earlier, such conferences were limited in scope. "Previously, one-day conferences did not allow for detailed discussions. Now, regional conferences are enabling comprehensive planning in collaboration with states," he added.

The minister underscored that while the Centre formulates policies and provides resources, effective implementation lies with the states. "The aim is for the Centre and states to function as a team," he said.

Representatives from Goa, Maharashtra, Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh, and Rajasthan participated in the conference. The implementation of central schemes in these states and the impact of natural disasters on crops were also reviewed.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
Nutritious food for citizens is a very important goal. With so much focus on rice and wheat, we need more diversity on our plates. Promoting millets and local crops through these strategies can really improve public health. Jai Kisan!
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Aman W
Reducing import dependency on pulses and oilseeds is long overdue. We are an agricultural country, we should be self-sufficient. Hope the roadmap includes concrete steps for seed technology and procurement for these crops.
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Sarah B
The mention of AI and machine learning in farming is interesting. If implemented well, it could help with precision agriculture and predicting weather patterns. But the tech needs to be affordable and accessible to small farmers, not just big agribusiness.
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Karthik V
Conferences and roadmaps are fine, but what about the existing problems? Loan waivers are a temporary fix. The focus should be on reducing input costs (fertilisers, diesel) as mentioned. That will have a direct impact on income. Let's see action now.
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Meera T
Integrated farming and region-specific strategies make so much sense. What works in Punjab won't work in Rajasthan. Glad they are moving away from one-size-fits-all approaches. Also, 'Ek Ped Maa Ke Naam' is a lovely initiative alongside this. 🌱

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