Digital wave swaying in Maharashtra, aims to digitize private vegetable market

26 Feb 2018 19:44:25

Mumbai, February 26: Stretching the ambit of private wholesale market dealers, the State Government of Maharashtra has decided to digitize the functioning of those wholesale vegetable markets for better transparency and to prevent farmers from being cheated while selling their products.

 

The Centre had earlier launched a pan-India electronic trading portal, called e-NAM (National Agriculture Market), to facilitate farmers, traders, buyers, exporters and processors with a common platform for trading commodities. The e-NAM portal helps to keep a database of the movement of vegetable produce, its distribution, prices and fluctuations.

The Maharashtra government is now planning to bring the private markets under the ambit of e-NAM, while it is also digitizing the functioning of some of the major Agriculture Produce Marketing Committees (APMCs) in the state.

Altogether there are around 60 major APMCs in Maharashtra which are being digitised. All the farmers, traders and commission agents working there are shifting to the e-NAM platform. Therefore the decision was taken to now make the e-NAM mandatory for private APMCs.

Over viewing the entire procedure it has been taken into consideration that more than 30 APMCs have already started the e-auction of the daily produce while 17 market committees having been conducting the quality testing of vegetables and produce supplied there every day.

As many as 2,24,487 farmers, 7,570 traders and 6,992 commission agents have so far registered on the e-NAM portal, said the minister. Technically an APMC has a turnover of some hundreds of crores. Once it comes on the e-NAM platform, all the transactions will become transparent and activities like cheating farmers by tampering the weighing machines will be stopped.

Maharashtra has private agriculture markets in Nashik, Vani in Yavatmal, Nanded, Washim and Buldhana. Apart from this the state has also launched weekly markets for farmers to sell their fruits and vegetables. Now there is a need for the daily transactions of these markets also to be digital, instead of the manual receipts.

The state has 307 APMCs, including both major and small ones, the turnover of which is around Rs 66,000 crore annually. Besides, there are 45 private markets, which do a business of around Rs 4,500 crore in a year. If all these transactions go online, it will save a huge cost and check manipulation of prices.

The collective turnover of all the agriculture markets in Maharashtra is worth over Rs 1 lakh crore, and there are 40,000 commission agents in Maharashtra, who daily sit in the APMCs and regulate the supply and demand of vegetables, fruits and food grains.

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