Maharashtra Agro Corp's Mobile Processing Units for Farmers

By By Rediff Money Desk, Chhatrapati Sambhajinagar
Jul 27, 2025 09:07
Maharashtra Agro Industries Development Corporation (MAIDC) plans to introduce mobile processing units to help farmers manage excess crop production & improve profitability.
Chhatrapati Sambhajinagar, Jul 27 (PTI) The state-owned Maharashtra Agro Industries Development Corporation (MAIDC) plans to procure mobile processing units to help farmers manage excess production of certain crops by enhancing their shelf life by 12-18 months, an official has said.

Oversupply in the market forces farmers to sell their produce, particularly the perishable ones, at throwaway prices or even discard them. The MAIDC initiative aims at ensuring good returns to the growers, said the managing director of the corporation, Mangesh Gondavale.

The official said they will procure two machines and deploy them in two districts by the next monsoon season on a pilot basis. Each machine can process 16-18 products and can be customised depending on the region, he said.

Processing includes washing, peeling, drying, chopping, slicing and liquefaction. For instance, tomatoes can be converted into puree, while onions can be dried for longer storage.

“Sometimes, the overall production of a crop in a region becomes high. To ensure that farmers do not incur losses in such a situation, we will introduce two portable processing units,” Gondavale said.

These machines can be taken directly to farms, saving farmers transportation costs, he said.

“Each unit can process 150-200 tonnes of produce per day and is equipped for specialised packaging that extends shelf life by 12-18 months,” he added.

Farmers can then take the product to the market when it is favourable to them. “Also, processed crops fetch better prices,” said Gondavale.

A Rajasthan-based startup founded by an IIT graduate will provide the processing units, each costing about Rs 1.5 crore, Gondavale said.

“We have done a survey of the types of crops that these units can process. We will use the machines on an experimental basis in two districts by the next Kharif season. We will then propose to the district administrations to procure the units to help farmers in their region,” he added.
Source: PTI
Read More On:
farmerspost-harvest managementmaharashtra agro industries development corporationexcess cropmobile processing units
DISCLAIMER - This article is from a syndicated feed. The original source is responsible for accuracy, views & content ownership. Views expressed may not reflect those of rediff.com India Limited.

You May Like To Read

MORE NEWS

HRS Aluglaze IPO Opens Dec 11 | SME IPO

HRS Aluglaze''s Rs 50.9 cr SME IPO opens Dec 11. Price band Rs 94-96. Funds to fuel...

Vingroup Invests USD 3 Billion in Telangana

Vingroup to invest USD 3 billion in Telangana across smart urban development, electric...

ATGC Biotech & Luxembourg Industries JV

ATGC Biotech and Luxembourg Industries form Semiophore Ltd, a joint venture for crop...

AI & Copyright: Blanket License Proposed for AI...

Govt panel suggests blanket AI license for copyrighted works, seeking public input....

Deloitte Launches Tax Pragya AI Platform

Deloitte India launches Tax Pragya, an AI-powered platform for tax professionals....

India Hiring Outlook Strongest Globally:...

Survey reveals India has 2nd strongest hiring outlook globally for Jan-Mar 2026. 52% of...

IMF Approves USD 1.2B Disbursement for Pakistan

IMF approves USD 1.2 billion disbursement to Pakistan under EFF & RSF. Supports...

India, Sweden Partner on Steel & Cement...

India and Sweden collaborate on 7 projects to decarbonise steel & cement sectors. Tata...

Bullion Rates Today: Gold & Silver Prices

Check today's opening bullion rates in Chennai. Gold (22Kt & 18Kt) and Silver prices...

JSW Steel Production Up 5% in November

JSW Steel reports a 5% increase in crude steel production to 24.39 lakh tonnes in...

Read More »

Sectoral Indices Market Indicators Listed Companies Gainers Losers Mutual Funds Portfolio Watchlist
© 2025 Rediff.com