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Clean Plant Programme (CPP)
Context:
The Union Cabinet recently approved the Clean Plant Programme (CPP) to increase the yield and productivity of horticulture crops in India.
More on News:
- It was first announced in the interim Budget speech of February 2024.
- This is also targeted at enhancing the quality of fruit crops across the nation.
- The Ministry of Agriculture will be the nodal ministry for the implementation of this programme.
- The funds for this programme will come from the Mission for Integrated Development of Horticulture (MIDH) and a loan from the Asian Development Bank (ADB) at a fifty-fifty ratio.
How will the CPP work?
- The programme focuses on three key components: providing farmers with virus-free, high-quality planting material for vegetative propagation, aiming to boost crop yields and income opportunities.
- Development of nine Clean Plant Centers (CPCs): CPCs will offer disease diagnostics and treatments, produce mother plants for nurseries, and quarantine both domestic and imported planting materials for commercial propagation and distribution.
- Infrastructure Development: It will involve establishing large-scale nurseries for efficient multiplication of clean planting material—mother plants from the CPCs will be propagated in these nurseries and distributed to farmers.
- Regulatory and Certification Process: This process guarantees full accountability and traceability in the production and sale of planting material.
Need for CPP:
- India is the second-largest producer of fruits and vegetables globally, after China.
- The area under horticulture crops in India increased from 24 million hectares in 2013-14 to 28.63 million hectares in 2023-24, with production rising from 277.4 million metric tonnes (mt) to 352 million mt.
- India is a significant importer and exporter of fresh fruits, exporting $1.15 billion worth of fresh fruits in 2023-24 while importing fruits worth $2.73 billion.
- Due to rising fruit consumption, demand for planting materials of foreign apples and “exotic” fruits like avocado and blueberry has grown.
- Between 2018-20, the EXIM committee approved the import of 21.44 lakh apple plants in 2018, increasing to 49.57 lakh in 2020.
- Avocado plant import permissions rose from 1,000 plants in 2018 to 26,500 in 2020, while blueberry plant imports increased from 1.55 lakh in 2018 to 4.35 lakh in 2020.
- Currently, importing plants is a complex process, requiring a two-year quarantine period, but CPCs will reduce this period to six months, making it easier for farmers to obtain disease-free and authentic planting material for horticultural crops in India.