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Tag: Taranjeet Singh Bhamra

Agritech Industry Expectation from Union Financial Budget 2022-23

Agnext

Mr Taranjeet Singh Bhamra, CEO & Founder, AgNext Technologies:

“2021 was a good year for the agritech sector, which flourished with strong investments and greater adoption of technologies in the market. To support this growth momentum, acute focus on the development of the burgeoning agritech ecosystem is pivotal. We hope that the upcoming budget will prioritize R&D incentivization in agriculture, along with the supportive impetus to allow agritech businesses, particularly start-ups, to scale domestically at a greater pace.

The emerging agritech ecosystem also requires a focus on infrastructure development and governance frameworks to spur more innovation in the sector. Fiscal considerations can be beneficial to facilitate the growth of the Indian agritech sector in 2022.”

AQWA CONNECT

Mr. Rajamanohar Somasundaram, Founder & CEO, Aquaconnect:

“The PMMSY has shown some great results since its implementation. To accelerate the Blue Revolution 2.0, we expect a greater push to promote digital solutions across the value chain right from pre-production to post-harvest to bring predictability, efficiency, and traceability. Incentivizing farmers with better subsidies to adopt data-driven farming, farm monitoring & automation tools will eventually ease and accelerate the wider tech adoption and drive the transition of farmers towards modern farming systems with improved productivity.

To achieve the PMMSY targets, the need of the hour is to drive the inclusion of formal finance and insurance in aquaculture. High insurance premiums demotivate the farmers from availing any risk mitigation for their crops, hence subsidizing insurance premiums will help fish and shrimp farmers to mitigate production risks and reduce production costs to a great extent. Further, increasing the fisheries KCC limit from the current range will help farmers meet their farming expenses entirely.”

Unnati

Mr Amit Sinha, Co-Founder, Unnati

 “The Agriculture sector has seen significant progress over the years, primarily owing to technological advancements, although this can be improved further. In the upcoming 2022-2023 Union Budget, we expect the government to keep farmer upliftment, alongside rural growth and development as their topmost priority. An increase in investments of rural infrastructure, MSME development, digitization of the agri-ecosystem, and farmer productivity prioritization of Agritech to fund early-stage start-ups that are disrupting the agricultural economy also need to be focused on.

The Agritech industry will require support from the government in terms of tax benefits, eligibility criteria, etc., to boost the progress the sector is making and make agriculture a robust, tech-led sector. Some additional focus areas could be the allocation of funds for increased digitalization in the agricultural ecosystem, the promotion of collaboration between district governance and Agritech startups in order to bring innovative solutions to the farmers’ market, providing subsidies or cutbacks on taxes to farmers who opt for Agritech products. Easy access to capital, tax relaxation, and interest subvention to encourage FPO setups will allow the agritech industry to grow quickly and will help FPOs to gain traction in this new era.

Besides these, financial support to farmers, extensions to important government schemes like Pradhan Mantri Matsya Sampada Yojana, PM-Kisan Scheme, etc., are certain elements the government will need to turn their attention to. Overall, the sector has significant expectations from the government for this year’s Union Budget, and we hope that the concerns are addressed to make agriculture a technologically advanced sector and enhance farmers’ living standards.”

AgNext and NAFED partner to organize pulses’ quality assessment training for Maharashtra’s FPOs

Agnext

20th January 2022: AgNext Technologies, India’s leading agritech company, collaborated with NAFED to organize a virtual training and awareness programme for Maharashtra’s biggest FPOs (Farmer Producer Organizations) on pulses’ quality assessment. AgNext engaged with five FPOs –VCMF, Markfed, MahaFPC, Pruthashakti and VAAPCO – to create awareness about the quality standards of pulses, particularly toor dal, for the upcoming procurement season. The session was attended by FPO leaders, who will in turn train 40,000-50,000 farmers across Maharashtra.

The objective of the training programme was to train the FPOs about the different market quality standards for toor dal. On the basis of this assessment, the commodity is graded and priced in the market. Practical demonstrations of physical assessment parameters were done to apprise the participants on how to recognize broken, damaged, immature, shriveled or weevilled pulses, foreign matter presence, the moisture content in the samples, and other essential parameters. The participants were also shown how AgNext’s physical quality assessment device ‘SpecX Visio’ can instantly analyze the toor dal samples and do the physical quality check in less than a minute.

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Highlighting the importance of the training, Mr. Taranjeet Singh Bhamra, CEO & Founder, AgNext Technologies said, “Traditional methods of food quality assessment are subjective and prone to manual errors. Ultimately, this impacts the price realization of the commodity at the time of trade. Better awareness and understanding of quality parameters of a commodity will help the farmers to trade better and generate more income. At the same time, tech-enabled best practices at the farm-gate and mandi level will help the farmers to improve their output quality and productivity over time. It is important to have regular training and knowledge sharing sessions among agribusinesses, producer organizations and farmers for increased adoption of innovative technologies in the agricultural ecosystem.”

Mr. Sanjay Nichal, Divisional Manager at the Vidarbha Cooperative Marketing Federation (VCMF), one of Maharashtra’s leading FPOs,said, “Uncertainty in food quality is one of the biggest reasons for rejection or low price of any commodity at the time of trade. For instance, lower quality of toor dal gets priced at a lower rate in the market and this leads to financial losses for farmers. It is important to generate awareness about quality parameters and new-age technologies which are being used for quality assessment by procurement organizations. This benefits the farmer producer organizations and small landholding farmers to stay up to date on the relevant information about industry best practices.”