FDI in Agriculture-bless or bane?
Circular emphasizes the term “under controlled conditions’’ which covers Cultivation under controlled conditions’ for the categories of floriculture, horticulture, cultivation of vegetables and mushrooms wherein rainfall, temperature, solar radiation, air humidity and culture medium are controlled artificially. Control in these parameters can be made through protected cultivation under green houses, net houses, poly houses or any other improved infrastructure facilities where microclimatic conditions are regulated.
Within Animal husbandry, the term under controlled conditions envisage rearing of animals under intensive farming systems with stall-feeding. Intensive farming system will require climate systems (ventilation, temperature/humidity management), health care and nutrition, herd registering/pedigree recording, use of machinery, waste management systems. Poultry breeding farms and hatcheries where microclimate is controlled through advanced technologies like incubators, ventilation systems etc will also come under this circular.
Pisciculture and aquaculture include aquariums and hatcheries where eggs are artificially fertilized and fry are hatched and incubated in an enclosed environment with artificial climate control.
As a part of the new policy, Government of India has brought significant hopes to oversee firms by permitting equity against imported capital goods and machinery and relaxing the norms regarding convertible instruments and downstream investments. It is expected that the farm sectors of the country would now see huge investments by foreign firms. Indian consumers might see better branding, packaging and glamour in the markets of agricultural sector with 100% foreign investment, but this may affect common consumers through risk of price rise and acquisition or closing down of small sca