Fri, 12 Jun 2026 · LIVE
Updated Dec 22, 2025 · 23:29
Odisha News Updated Dec 22, 2025

Odisha Minister Reviews Kharif Procurement, Vows to Curb Malpractices

Odisha Minister Krushna Chandra Patra held a review meeting on Kharif crop procurement operations in Koraput, directing district administration officials to ensure a smooth process. The minister emphasized the deployment of trained nodal officers and stated that unauthorized deductions from farmers' produce would not be allowed. The meeting is part of the government's effort to ensure the procurement of monsoon crops at Minimum Support Price proceeds efficiently.

Odisha Minister holds review meeting on Kharif procurement operations

Koraput (Odisha), December 21

Odisha Minister Krushna Chandra Patra reviewed the Kharif Procurement Operations and instructed officers to ensure procedures are followed to ensure smooth procurement.

The Minister arrived for a review of the Kharif Procurement operations to direct the Zilla Prashasan officers on the proper procedures for the procurement from Mandis and farmers.

"The review meeting was held to review the procurement process and how to do it correctly", he said.

He mentioned that officers from Zilla Prashasan (district administration), along with the local MLA, were there for the review.

"The district administration officers and the local MLA were also present, and it went well. The district administration will ensure that the procurement process goes smoothly.", he added.

The minister stated that procurement would be on the right track after the review and that all officers are in service for it.

He mentioned that several officers have been assigned to closely monitor the procurement process.

"Many officers have been deployed for the same purpose. That includes Mandi Nodal Officer and Mandi Supervisor. They have been trained for a smooth procurement process, and they will work towards that.", says Patra.

Furthermore, he stated that there would be no "Katni-Chatni" (unauthorised deductions) in the Kharif procurement operation. It is a malpractice which includes illegal deduction of paddy quantity by millers or Mandi officials from farmers, often under the pretext of poor quality.

This was done in an effort to ensure that the Indian government's process of buying Kharif (monsoon) crops like paddy, pulses, oilseeds, and cotton from farmers at the declared Minimum Support Price (MSP) through agencies like FCI (Food Corporation of India) goes smoothly.

Meanwhile, in a bid to curb vehicular pollution and enforce stricter compliance with emission norms, the State Transport Authority (STA) in Odisha has directed oil marketing companies to stop dispensing petrol and diesel to vehicles without a valid Pollution Under Control Certificate (PUCC).Several districts in Odisha are likely to experience dense fog in the coming days, prompting authorities to issue road safety alerts.

In view of this, the State Transport Authority (STA), Odisha, has urged road users to exercise extreme caution while driving to prevent accidents. Drivers are advised to reduce speed, use fog lights, avoid overtaking, and maintain safe distances from other vehicles.

— ANI

Reader Comments

Priya S

Reviews are fine, but implementation is key. Officers are trained, but will they actually reach the small farmers in remote areas of Koraput? The focus should be on timely payment. Last season, payments were delayed in our district.

Rohit P

Positive step! The mention of the local MLA being present is good for accountability. Hope the monitoring is strict and farmers get the full MSP without any middlemen cutting their share. Jai Kisan!

Aman W

The article jumps from procurement to pollution certificates and fog alerts? A bit scattered. But on the main topic, stopping illegal deductions is a big promise. Let's see if the ground reality changes this procurement season.

Michael C

Interesting to read about India's MSP system. The focus on procedural fairness for farmers is commendable. The link to environmental measures (PUCC) in the same article shows the government is looking at multiple fronts, which is a complex but necessary task.

Nisha Z

Hope the officers deployed are honest and accessible. Often, farmers have to run from pillar to post. A smooth procurement process with direct benefit is what we need. The fog alert is also timely for road safety.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Reader Voices

Leave a comment

Be kind. Add to the conversation. 0/50
Thank you — your comment has been submitted.
JS blocked