Chouhan Launches Pusa Agri Fair, Vows to End Farmer Payment Delays

Union Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan inaugurated the three-day Pusa Krishi Vigyan Mela in Delhi, outlining a major reform agenda for Indian agriculture. He warned of strict action, including 12% interest penalties, against agencies or states that delay payments to farmers. The minister proposed direct benefit transfers for subsidies, strengthening Krishi Vigyan Kendras, and reforming pesticide licensing for transparency. He also announced the revival of the Viksit Krishi Sankalp Abhiyan in April to bridge the gap between lab research and field application.

Key Points: Pusa Krishi Vigyan Mela Inaugurated with Agri Reforms Agenda

  • 12% interest on delayed payments
  • Direct subsidy transfer to farmers
  • Strengthen KVKs as command centres
  • Reforms in pesticide licensing
3 min read

Union Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan inaugurates 3-day Pusa Krishi Vigyan Mela in Delhi

Union Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan inaugurates Pusa fair, announces strict action on delayed payments, DBT for subsidies, and KVK reforms.

"Parking farmers' funds and profiting from delays will not be allowed. - Shivraj Singh Chouhan"

New Delhi, February 25

Union Minister for Agriculture & Farmers' Welfare and Rural Development Shivraj Singh Chouhan on Wednesday inaugurated the three-day Pusa Krishi Vigyan Mela at the ICAR-IARI campus in the national capital, outlining a sweeping reform agenda aimed at steering Indian farming toward "Developed Agriculture-Self-Reliant India."

According to an official press release, the minister laid out a clear message: delays in farmers' payments, procedural bottlenecks and weak monitoring systems will no longer be tolerated.

The annual fair, held at the Indian Agricultural Research Institute (IARI), was inaugurated with a ceremonial plantation drive. The event was attended by Agriculture Secretary Devesh Chaturvedi, ICAR Director General ML Jat and IARI Director CH Srinivasa Rao, along with scientists, progressive farmers and institutional representatives, the release stated.

Placing farmers at the centre of policymaking, Chouhan shared the stage with cultivators and personally assisted a differently-abled farmer, reinforcing what the ministry described as a "Farmer First" approach. Seven farmers were honoured with the IARI Krishi Adhyeta Award during the event.

Addressing pending dues, the minister warned that any agency or state government delaying farmers' payments would have to pay 12% interest on the withheld amount. He emphasised that the Centre would explore mechanisms to transfer its share directly into farmers' bank accounts in case of state-level delays. "Parking farmers' funds and profiting from delays will not be allowed," he said.

On agricultural mechanisation and subsidy-linked schemes, Chouhan noted that over 18 central schemes are being implemented through states, but stressed the need for stronger monitoring to ensure benefits reach genuine farmers. He cited cases where listed beneficiaries did not receive equipment despite allocated funds.

The minister also proposed strengthening Krishi Vigyan Kendras (KVKs) as district-level agricultural reform command centres to bridge research and extension gaps. On Kisan Credit Cards (KCC), he reiterated that loans are available at an effective 4% interest rate but insisted there must be zero delays, holding banks accountable for timely disbursal.

Calling for reforms in pesticide licensing, Chouhan advocated a transparent, time-bound and simplified approval system to curb substandard products and speed up access to quality inputs. On Minimum Support Price (MSP) procurement, he suggested reducing the current three-month window to one month to ensure farmers receive prompt payments.

Highlighting the Centre's annual fertiliser subsidy of over Rs 2 lakh crore, the minister said the government would consider direct benefit transfer of the subsidy into farmers' accounts, enabling them to decide input purchases independently.

Chouhan also announced that the "Viksit Krishi Sankalp Abhiyan" will resume in April ahead of the Kharif season, with scientists reaching villages to transfer lab innovations directly to fields. He described the Pusa fair as a national congregation of farmers and innovators, and directed IARI to scale up the event further next year, the press release added.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

S
Shreya B
Direct benefit transfer for fertiliser subsidy is a game-changer! Farmers will get the freedom to choose quality products. The current system through shops is so corrupt. Good move if executed well.
A
Aman W
Strengthening KVKs is crucial. In our village, the KVK scientist visits once in 3 months. If they become proper command centres, farmers can get real-time advice. Lab to land should be the focus.
P
Priyanka N
Reducing MSP procurement window from 3 months to 1 month is a bold and necessary reform. Cash flow is everything for a farmer. Waiting for months defeats the purpose of MSP. Hope states cooperate.
D
David E
Respectfully, while the announcements sound good, the real test is delivery. We've heard about monitoring and transparency before. The article itself mentions cases where funds were allocated but equipment never reached farmers. Need to see action on the ground.
K
Karthik V
Transparent pesticide licensing is overdue! So many spurious products in the market ruin crops and soil. A time-bound system will help genuine companies and protect farmers. Jai Kisan! 🙏
M
Meera T
The 'Viksit Krishi Sankalp Abhiyan' starting in April is promising. Scientists visiting villages before Kharif

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