Budget 2026 Boosts Fisheries & Animal Husbandry for Farm Growth

The Union Budget 2026-27 places significant emphasis on strengthening the fisheries and animal husbandry sectors to drive agricultural growth and increase farmers' incomes. Key initiatives include the integrated development of 500 reservoirs and 'Amrit Sarovars' to bolster the fisheries value chain and create income sources for small farmers. For animal husbandry, the budget introduces a credit-linked subsidy programme to spur entrepreneurship and modernise livestock enterprises in rural areas. These measures aim to diversify income streams, improve climate resilience, and build organised, market-oriented enterprises in the allied agricultural sectors.

Key Points: Budget 2026: Fisheries, Animal Husbandry Get Major Push

  • Integrated development of 500 reservoirs for fisheries
  • Credit-linked subsidy for animal husbandry entrepreneurship
  • Modernisation of livestock infrastructure & value chains
  • Duty-free treatment for fish caught in Indian EEZ
4 min read

Union Budget 2026: Strengthening fisheries, animal husbandry take centre stage in farm sector growth

FM Nirmala Sitharaman's Budget 2026-27 focuses on integrated reservoir development, fisheries value chains, and credit-linked subsidies for livestock to boost farm incomes.

"Budget 2026 has reframed water bodies, fisheries and livestock as central to farm‑sector transformation - Analysis"

New Delhi, Feb 1

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman's Budget 2026-2027 speech on Sunday reflected the Centre's push to strengthen the fisheries sector and a robust support for animal husbandry in rural and peri-urban areas to spur farm sector growth.

India's fisheries and animal husbandry sectors are vital pillars of rural livelihoods and national food security, contributing significantly to the agricultural GDP and employment.

As part of increasing farmers' income, the Budget includes provisions for the integrated development of 500 reservoirs and 'Amrit Sarovars'. This is aimed at strengthening the fisheries value chain in coastal areas and enabling market linkages involving startups and women-led groups, together with Fish Farmers Producer Organisations.

Such reservoirs will support irrigation while enabling fish cultivation. It will help create additional sources of income, especially for smallholding or landless farmers, to diversify. Integrated management will also encourage efficiency in the use of water and climate resilience in regions with variable rain.

Budget 2026-2027 has thus laid further emphasis on fisheries in coastal ecosystems, focusing on sustainability, stock management and infrastructure support.

Investments in landing centres, cold chains, and processing facilities are expected to improve outputs and price realisation for those involved in the sector.

Meanwhile, to spur marine trade competitiveness, fish caught in the Exclusive Economic Zone and high seas by Indian fishing vessels are treated as duty-free when brought into Indian ports, and treated as exports when landed at foreign ports. Also, there is an increase in the value limit of duty-free imports of specified inputs from one to three per cent of the free on board value of seafood products exported during the preceding financial year.

Animal husbandry will also be among the key areas for increasing farmers' income.

To provide quality employment opportunities in rural and peri-urban areas, the government will initiate several measures. These include support to the sector in entrepreneurship development through a credit-linked subsidy programme, scaling up and modernisation of livestock enterprises, enhance creation of livestock, dairy and poultry-focused integrated-value chains, and encourage creation of livestock farmer producers' organisations.

The Budget has rolled out a credit‑linked subsidy to spur entrepreneurship in animal husbandry. The scheme is aimed at small and medium enterprises in dairy, poultry and related activities, making it easier to start and scale businesses and attracting private investment.

It also backs modernisation of livestock infrastructure with better breeding centres, improved feed systems, stronger animal health services and upgraded cold‑chain logistics. These upgrades are designed to move animal rearing away from subsistence and into organised, market‑oriented enterprises.

Building robust dairy and poultry value chains is central to the rural growth plan. By boosting collection, processing and marketing facilities, the Budget hopes to raise efficiency, cut waste and give farmers a bigger share of value‑added returns.

Credit and enterprise support aim to turn livestock rearing and fish processing into viable small businesses. Greater production and value‑chain investment can improve the availability of protein‑rich foods and reduce seasonal price swings for the consumer.

Overall, Budget 2026 ties reservoirs, fisheries, and livestock into the growth story for agriculture. By linking water assets with allied sectors and entrepreneurship, the plan aims to broaden farmers' income streams, shield rural households from climate and price shocks, and lift productivity across the countryside.

The Finance Minister has delivered a budget in keeping with India's stride towards Viksit Bharat 2047, signalling a clear policy aimed at the future for sustainable gains in agriculture, which will not only come from crops but also the allied sectors.

Budget 2026 has reframed water bodies, fisheries and livestock as central to farm‑sector transformation, where much will depend on reservoir development and intensified aquaculture, with regional support to manage water quality, biodiversity and disease risks. Success will depend on state coordination, clear tenure rules for reservoir use, and timely credit disbursal. Additional support will be required with reliable cold chains and market access.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
This is excellent news for women's self-help groups in my area. The mention of involving women-led groups in the fisheries value chain can be transformative. Access to cold chains and processing facilities means they can get better prices instead of selling fresh catch at throwaway rates to middlemen.
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Rohit P
The credit-linked subsidy for animal husbandry is a game-changer. My uncle has a small dairy unit and struggles with upfront costs for modern equipment. If this scheme is easy to access without endless paperwork, it will truly boost rural entrepreneurship. Fingers crossed!
S
Sarah B
As someone working in sustainable development, I appreciate the focus on climate resilience and integrated water management. Using reservoirs for multiple purposes is key in rain-variable regions. However, the success hinges entirely on "clear tenure rules for reservoir use" as the article notes. Without that, conflicts are inevitable.
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Vikram M
The duty-free treatment for fish caught in our EEZ is a long-overdue boost for our deep-sea fishing fleet. It will help them compete internationally. But alongside infrastructure, we need strict enforcement against illegal fishing to protect our marine stocks. Sustainability cannot be an afterthought.
K
Karthik V
Good vision on paper. My respectful criticism is that these schemes often get delayed in fund disbursement and the real beneficiaries—the small, landless farmers—are the last to know. The government must run massive awareness campaigns in local languages and ensure banks are on board. The devil is in the implementation.

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