Food Processing Industry, Mega Food Parks & Food Fortification – UPSC Notes

Food Processing Industry, Mega Food Parks & Food Fortification – Legacy IAS | UPSC
🏛️ Legacy IAS – Bangalore | UPSC Civil Services Coaching

Food Processing Industry,
Mega Food Parks & Food Fortification

GS Paper III – Indian Economy | Updated with Current Affairs 2024–25 | Notes + PYQs + MCQs
📋 GS Paper III 🍱 Sunrise Sector 💰 US$354.5 Bn (2024) 🏭 PLI Scheme ₹10,900 Cr 🌾 PMKSY & PMFME 🍎 Food Fortification 📊 6th Largest Globally
US$354.5 Bn
Market Size (2024)
6th
Largest Globally
7 Million+
Jobs Supported
8.39%
Share in Agri GVA (2024)
US$13.1 Bn
FDI (Apr 2000–Mar 2025)
25–30%
Post-harvest Loss
1. Food Processing – Overview
Food processing involves transforming raw plant and animal materials into edible products through techniques like cleaning, grading, milling, preservation, and packaging. It has been declared a "Sunrise Sector" and a key priority under Make in India.
1.1 Levels of Processing
Level 1

🌾 Primary Processing

Basic operations on raw produce: cleaning, grading, sorting, packaging, milling. Examples: Rice milling, dal milling, cotton ginning, milk chilling, fish icing. Least value addition but critical for reducing post-harvest losses.

Level 2

🏭 Secondary Processing

Converting primary processed ingredients into new food products. Examples: Wheat flour into bread/biscuits, milk into cheese/ghee/butter, oilseeds into edible oil, fruits into jams/sauces. Significantly higher value addition.

Level 3

🍱 Tertiary Processing

Creating ready-to-eat (RTE) or ready-to-cook (RTC) products. Examples: Frozen meals, instant noodles, packaged snacks, canned foods. Highest value addition; drives modern food retail and export markets.

🌾 Farm
Raw Produce
🧺 Collection
Aggregation
❄️ Cold Chain
Storage/Transport
🏭 Processing
Value Addition
📦 Packaging
Branding
🛒 Market
Domestic/Export
1.2 Current Status

📊 Industry Size & Growth

  • Market size: US$354.5 billion (2024)
  • Projected: US$535 billion by FY26; US$700+ billion by 2030
  • CAGR: 8.38% (projected 2025–2033)
  • Average growth rate (2013-14 to 2023-24): ~3.9–8.3%
  • India's food and grocery market = world's 6th largest; food processing industry ranked 5th in production, consumption, export & expected growth
  • Accounts for ~32% of total food market in India

🌍 India's Agricultural Standing

  • 1st: Milk, banana, mango, ginger, spices, millets, livestock
  • 2nd: Fruits, vegetables, rice, wheat, fisheries, total food production
  • 15 agro-climatic zones — year-round diverse raw material supply
  • 13% contribution to India's total exports; 6% of total industrial investment
  • Processed food exports: US$7.9 billion (FY 2024-25, APEDA data)
  • Agri + food processing exports: US$49.4 billion (2024-25)
UPSC Exam Alert — Key Distinction: The sector contributes 8.39% of GVA in Agriculture and 8.80% of GVA in Manufacturing (IBEF/MoFPI 2024), but only ~1.8% of total/overall GVA at current prices (Grant Thornton 2024) — highlighting the gap between potential and actual performance. The sector contributes 13% of India's exports and 6% of total industrial investment. This gap is a frequent Mains discussion point.
2. Significance of Food Processing

💰 Economic Contribution

  • FDI: US$13.1 billion (April 2000–March 2025)
  • Supports 7 million+ jobs directly and indirectly
  • Registered sector: 20.32 lakh workers (ASI 2019-20)
  • Unregistered sector: 51.11 lakh workers (NSSO 73rd Round)
  • Farmers receive 30–35% value vs 65–70% in developed economies — processing can bridge this gap

🌾 Farm Linkage & Farmer Income

  • PMKSY: Supported 53 lakh farmers, created 7.6 lakh jobs
  • PLI scheme: 3.39 lakh jobs; 35 lakh MT added processing capacity
  • PMFME: 1.62 lakh+ loans sanctioned; 3.65 lakh SHG members approved for seed capital
  • Reduces post-harvest losses → increases farmer net realisation
  • Contract farming expands — food processors ensure assured prices

🏙️ Rural Employment & Women Empowerment

  • Food processing is labour-intensive; ideal for rural and semi-urban areas
  • Women entrepreneurship: Lijjat Papad, SHG-based food ventures
  • PMFME: 3.65 lakh SHG members approved for seed capital; 76 incubation centres approved
  • Agro-processing clusters create industrial activity in farm zones
  • Promotes balanced regional development — not concentrated in metros

🥗 Nutritional Security

  • Fortification of staples (rice, wheat flour, edible oil, milk) addresses hidden hunger
  • Iron, folic acid, Vitamin A/D, B12 — added to staple foods via FSSAI fortification standards
  • Reduces micronutrient deficiency — India's triple burden of malnutrition
  • Extends food shelf life → ensures year-round food access in deficit regions
  • Fortified rice distributed via PDS and PM-POSHAN (MDM) scheme
3. Growth Drivers of Food Processing in India

65% of India's population is under 35, driving demand for convenient, processed, and packaged foods. Rapid urbanisation (urban population ~36% and growing) → busy lifestyles → demand for Ready-to-Eat (RTE) and Ready-to-Cook (RTC) meals. Rising disposable incomes → premium, branded, organic, and functional foods (ayurvedic/herbal). India's processed food market expected to grow substantially — strong structural demand driver.

E-commerce and Quick Commerce (Q-commerce) platforms (Blinkit, Zepto, Swiggy Instamart) shortened farm-to-fork journey. B2B agri supply chain companies like Ninjacart connect farmers directly with food businesses, reducing intermediaries. Digital India initiative facilitated direct farmer-processor connections. Agri-tech startups raised USD 706 million in 2023 funding. Companies like CropIn use AI and satellite monitoring to ensure consistent quality raw material supply for processors — critical for contract farming.

100% FDI under automatic route has attracted Nestlé (₹5,000 crore), PepsiCo, Danone. PLI Scheme (₹10,900 crore) attracted ₹9,000 crore cumulative investment; export CAGR of 13.23% from 2019-20 to 2024-25 for PLISFPI-approved applicants. PSL classification of food and cold chain infrastructure eases credit access. Recent trade agreements with UAE, Australia, EFTA open duty-free markets for processed food exports.

Health-conscious consumers driving demand for organic, fortified, functional, and plant-based foods. India's organic food market: US$1.9 billion (2024) → projected US$10.8 billion by 2033 (CAGR 20.13%). Millets in mainstream: GAIA's millet-based snacks, ITC's Farmland preservative-free frozen foods. International Year of Millets 2023 + PLI's ₹800 crore millet fund boosted nutri-cereal processing. Traditional Indian ingredients (turmeric, ashwagandha) finding global market.

India offers ~40% lower production costs compared to global peers. Large, low-cost skilled and semi-skilled workforce. Abundant and diverse raw material base — 15 agro-climatic zones ensure year-round supply. These make India an ideal hub for both domestic consumption and global food processing supply chains. India's food exports competitive in markets like Middle East, Southeast Asia, EU, and USA for spices, basmati rice, marine products.

4. Key Government Schemes
Umbrella SchemeCentral Sector

🌾 Pradhan Mantri Kisan SAMPADA Yojana (PMKSY)

SAMPADA = Scheme for Agro-Marine Processing and Development of Agro-Processing Clusters. Central sector umbrella scheme for creating modern food processing infrastructure from farm gate to retail outlet. Originally launched as SAMPADA in 2017, renamed PMKSY.

  • Key sub-schemes: (1) Integrated Cold Chain & Value Addition; (2) Agro-Processing Clusters (76 approved as of June 2024); (3) Creation/Expansion of Food Processing Capacities (Unit Scheme); (4) Cold Chain; (5) Food Testing Labs; (6) Operation Greens; (7) R&D
  • Note: Mega Food Park, Backward & Forward Linkages, Skill Development components discontinued from 01.04.2021 (15th Finance Commission cycle)
  • Impact: 53 lakh farmers benefited; 7.6 lakh+ employment created; 1,600+ projects funded
  • Budget 2025-26: ₹729 crore allocated to PMKSY
₹10,000 CroreAtmanirbhar Bharat

🤝 PM Formalisation of Micro Food Processing Enterprises (PMFME) Scheme

Launched June 2020 under Atmanirbhar Bharat. First-ever Government scheme specifically for micro food processing enterprises. Aims to bring 2 lakh unorganised micro-units into the formal sector. Promotes "Vocal for Local."

  • Credit-linked subsidy: 35% of eligible project cost (max ₹10 lakh per unit)
  • One District One Product (ODOP): Each district promotes one specific food product linked to its local agricultural strength
  • SHG support: Seed capital of ₹40,000 per SHG member for working capital and tools; 3.65 lakh SHG members approved
  • Progress: 1.62 lakh+ loans sanctioned; 76 incubation centres approved; 92,549 enterprises approved for assistance (June 2024)
  • Budget 2025-26: ₹2,000 crore allocated
₹10,900 CroreFY 2021-27

🏭 Production Linked Incentive (PLI) Scheme for Food Processing (PLISFPI)

Launched 2021 to boost domestic manufacturing and exports. Incentivises food companies for incremental sales growth. 170 applications approved. Runs for 6 years (FY 2021-22 to FY 2026-27).

  • Three pillars: (1) Large entities — promote Indian brands globally; (2) SME segment — innovative/organic food products; (3) Millet-based products — ₹800 crore dedicated fund
  • Progress: ₹9,000 crore cumulative investment; 3.39 lakh jobs; 35 lakh MT processing capacity added; export CAGR 13.23% (2019-20 to 2024-25)
  • PLI product sales grew 10.58%; export sales grew 7.41% (recent MoFPI data)
  • Budget 2025-26: ₹1,444 crore allocated
  • Challenge: Historically, large share of PLI funds underutilised — improving with time
NABARD₹2,000 Crore

🏦 Special Food Processing Fund (NABARD)

Corpus of ₹2,000 crore under NABARD for providing affordable credit to public and private players for Designated Food Parks (DFPs). Replaced FCI-linked Food Processing Fund (2014-15).

  • Funds infrastructure and supply chain projects in and around food parks
  • Provides long-tenure, low-interest loans to food processing units
  • Complements PSL classification — food and cold chain infrastructure eligible for Priority Sector Lending
Budget 2024-25New Initiatives

🌟 Budget 2024-25 Announcements

  • 50 multi-product food irradiation units: Reduce post-harvest losses; extend shelf life for export readiness
  • 100 NABL-accredited food testing laboratories: Strengthen quality assurance; address EU rejection issue
  • National Makhana Board: Globally position makhana (foxnuts) — Bihar's premium superfood — for branding, value addition, and international markets
Discontinued 2021Legacy Scheme

🏗️ Mega Food Park Scheme (MFPS) — Now Discontinued

Implemented from 2008 to 31 March 2021. Discontinued from 01.04.2021 — only committed liabilities being honoured. Replaced/absorbed into the broader PMKSY framework's Agro-Processing Cluster and Unit Scheme components.

  • Cluster-based "hub and spoke model" — Central Processing Centre (CPC) + Primary Processing Centres (PPCs) + Collection Centres (CCs)
  • 41 Mega Food Parks approved over scheme lifetime; 25 are now operational (MoFPI official website, 2025); 17 remain under implementation
  • Examples: Patanjali MFP (Haridwar), Srini MFP (Andhra Pradesh), Integrated Mega Food Park (Andhra Pradesh)
  • 325 Designated Food Parks listed as of May 2024 (continuation of legacy)
5. Mega Food Parks — Detailed Notes
Important Exam Update: The Mega Food Park Scheme (as a standalone scheme) was discontinued from 01 April 2021. Questions referring to "Mega Food Parks" should be answered in context of PMKSY and its sub-schemes. The hub-and-spoke cluster model concept continues under Agro-Processing Clusters (76 approved under PMKSY as of June 2024) and Designated Food Parks (325 listed as of May 2024).

🏗️ Hub & Spoke Model

  • Central Processing Centre (CPC): Core processing facility with modern equipment, cold storage, quality testing labs — typically 50+ acres
  • Primary Processing Centres (PPCs): Aggregation, sorting, grading near farms — linked to CPC (50–75 km radius)
  • Collection Centres (CCs): Farm-gate collection points, basic cleaning and packaging — linked to PPCs
  • Managed by Special Purpose Vehicle (SPV) — public-private partnership entity

🎯 Objectives

  • Create state-of-the-art infrastructure near agri/horti production zones
  • Reduce post-harvest losses by ensuring cold chain connectivity
  • Attract investment into food processing MSMEs within the park
  • Integrate backward (farmer) and forward (market) linkages
  • Generate rural employment and increase farmers' income
  • ~150 food processing units established inside sanctioned Mega Food Parks
Evolving Architecture: Post-discontinuation of standalone Mega Food Parks, the government's approach has shifted to: (1) Agro-Processing Clusters under PMKSY — 76 clusters approved (June 2024); (2) Designated Food Parks (DFPs) — 325 listed (May 2024), supported by NABARD's Special Food Processing Fund; (3) One District One Product (ODOP) clusters aligned with PMFME for micro-enterprise development. This is a more decentralised, inclusive approach compared to the capital-intensive Mega Food Park model.
6. Food Fortification in India
Food fortification is the practice of deliberately adding micronutrients (vitamins and minerals) to food staples to address nutritional deficiencies in a population. It is a cost-effective, large-scale public health intervention.
Rationale: India's "Triple Burden of Malnutrition" — under-nutrition, hidden hunger (micronutrient deficiency), and obesity. 57% of women of reproductive age anaemic (NFHS-5); 67.1% of children (6-59 months) anaemic; Vitamin A and iodine deficiencies widespread. Dietary diversification alone insufficient — fortification provides a "safety net" for micronutrient intake through normal food consumption.
6.1 FSSAI Fortification Framework
Food VehicleMicronutrients AddedStatusKey Programme
Iodised Salt Iodine Mandatory (since 1962) National Iodine Deficiency Disorders Control Programme (NIDDCP)
Double Fortified Salt (DFS) Iodine + Iron Voluntary/Promoted Used in midday meals (PM-POSHAN) and ICDS in select states
Wheat Flour (Atta) Iron, Folic Acid, Vitamin B12 Voluntary (FSSAI standards 2018) Large-scale adoption by branded atta manufacturers; FSSAI + logo
Edible Oil Vitamin A, Vitamin D Draft mandatory notification issued (Jan 2021) — under deliberation FSSAI Food Safety & Standards (Fortification) Regulations 2018
Milk Vitamin A, Vitamin D Draft mandatory notification issued (Jan 2021) — under deliberation FSSAI Regulations 2018; amendment draft September 2024
Rice Iron, Folic Acid, Vitamin B12 Mandatory in PDS/welfare schemes (from 2024); voluntary in market Fortified rice in PDS (PMGKAY), PM-POSHAN, ICDS — continued through December 2028 (Cabinet Oct 2024)
6.2 Fortified Rice in PDS — Key Current Affairs
Cabinet Decision (October 9, 2024): Approved continuation of fortified rice under PMGKAY and other welfare schemes from July 2024 to December 2028. All rice distributed through PDS (PMGKAY), PM-POSHAN, and ICDS to be fortified with Iron, Folic Acid, and Vitamin B12. Implemented as Central Sector Initiative, fully government-funded. Phase III of rice fortification (April 2023–March 2024): 207.31 lakh MT fortified rice lifted by States/UTs.

✅ Arguments FOR Fortification

  • Cost-effective: WHO estimates ₹1–2 per person per year for rice fortification
  • Passive intake — no behaviour change required from consumers
  • Addresses hidden hunger at scale; targets vulnerable populations via PDS
  • Evidence-based: WFP, WHO, UNICEF recommend staple fortification globally
  • Success model: Iodised salt eliminated goitre; fortification can repeat this for other micronutrients

⚠️ Arguments AGAINST / Concerns

  • Risk of hypervitaminosis (excess synthetic vitamins) — especially Vitamin A toxicity
  • Overestimation of anaemia/Vitamin A deficiency — some critics argue
  • Conflict of interest: studies funded by MNCs that benefit (BASF, DSM, Lonza)
  • Excludes small rice millers and informal processors — consolidation risk
  • Dietary diversity approach preferred over synthetic micronutrient addition
  • FSSAI September 2024 draft amendment modifying fortification regulations — ongoing
FSSAI's + Logo: FSSAI introduced the "+" (plus) logo for fortified foods in 2017 to help consumers identify fortified products. Foods carrying the logo have been verified to meet FSSAI's fortification standards for the claimed micronutrients. The logo is a key element of FSSAI's "Eat Right India" initiative.
7. Challenges in Food Processing
Core Problem

🔗 Fragmented Supply Chain

86% of farmers are small/marginal — difficult to aggregate produce at scale. Multiple intermediaries each add cost without proportionate value. Farmers receive only 30–35% of consumer price vs 65–70% in developed economies. Broken supply chains in agri-hinterlands (e.g., Bihar) — perishables lost before reaching processors.

Infrastructure Gap

❄️ Cold Chain Deficit

25–30% of fruits and vegetables lost annually due to inadequate cold chain. Post-harvest losses: ₹90,000–92,651 crore annually (NITI Aayog/MoFPI estimates). Cold storage capacity uneven — concentrated in UP, Maharashtra; sparse in Northeast and hilly regions. Inadequate last-mile refrigerated transport.

Regulatory Problem

🏛️ Regulatory Complexity

Multiple agencies — FSSAI, APEDA, BIS, state-level agencies — each with overlapping jurisdiction. No single-window clearance; setup time 6–8 months. Frequent regulatory changes create compliance uncertainty for MSMEs. SPS (sanitary and phytosanitary) measures in export markets: 527 Indian products flagged/rejected by EU (Sep 2020–Apr 2024) — quality and safety compliance failures.

Human Resource

👨‍🎓 Skilled Workforce Deficit

Only 3% of food processing workforce formally trained. Critical gaps in food technology, quality control, food safety management, R&D. Skills mismatch between academia and industry needs. Affects product quality, innovation, and ability to meet international standards — directly linked to EU rejection issues.

Finance Gap

💸 Capital Crunch for MSMEs

High risk perception (seasonality, perishability, market volatility) → stringent lending norms. Limited access to formal credit constrains technology upgrade and capacity expansion. Tomato price volatility example: 400% price spike in mid-2023 severely impacted tomato-based processors — demonstrates market risk. PLI largely benefited large corporates; MSMEs still struggle.

Informality

🏚️ Highly Unorganised Sector

~75% of food processing activity is in unorganised/informal segment. Unorganised units use outdated technology, have poor hygiene standards, and are largely outside regulatory oversight. Low GVA contribution (1.88%) relative to potential. PMFME scheme specifically targets formalisation — slow but steady progress.

7.1 Way Forward
1. Cluster-Based Development: Integrated food clusters near farm zones with shared cold chains, NABL labs, and logistics reduce costs by 25–30%. ODOP model + Agro-Processing Clusters under PMKSY are the vehicle.
2. Tech-Enabled Supply Chains: Blockchain for traceability, IoT for cold chain monitoring, AI for demand forecasting. Drone Didi scheme for crop mapping + processor forecasting. Digital Agriculture Mission (2024) provides the DPI infrastructure.
3. Regulatory Simplification: Single-window clearance to cut approval from 6–8 months to 2–3 months. Unified digital platform integrating FSSAI, APEDA, BIS. Harmonise Indian standards with Codex Alimentarius for export competitiveness.
4. Quality & Export Ecosystem: 50 irradiation units + 100 NABL labs (Budget 2024-25) directly address EU rejection problem. Export-oriented zones with plug-and-play infrastructure. Country-specific packaging and marketing strategies.
5. R&D & Innovation: Food Innovation Labs in partnership with CSIR/ICAR/academia. Weighted tax deduction on R&D. Digitise traditional food processing techniques for scalable innovation — makhana, millets, spice value chains.
8. Current Affairs 2024–25 High Priority

🍚 Fortified Rice in PDS Extended to December 2028 (October 2024)

  • Cabinet approved continuation of supply of fortified rice under PMGKAY and Other Welfare Schemes from July 2024 to December 2028
  • Fortified with Iron, Folic Acid, and Vitamin B12 (to address anaemia and micronutrient deficiency)
  • Implemented as a Central Sector Initiative, fully funded by Government — using previously approved ₹11,79,859 crore PMGKAY allocation
  • Covers PDS (PMGKAY), PM-POSHAN (mid-day meals), and ICDS (Anganwadis)
  • Phase III (2023-24): 207.31 lakh MT fortified rice lifted across all States/UTs

🌟 National Makhana Board — Budget 2024-25

  • Established to globally position makhana (foxnuts/Euryale ferox) — Bihar's premium export crop
  • India produces ~90% of world's makhana — mostly from Darbhanga, Madhubani, Sitamarhi districts of Bihar
  • Addresses fragmentation in makhana value chain; promotes GI tagging, branding, and value addition
  • Makhana exports targeted to global superfood markets (US, EU, Middle East)
  • Part of government's broader "One District One Product" and superfood export strategy
  • Complements earlier "Mithila Makhana" GI tag (2022)

🏭 PLI Scheme Progress Update (2024-25)

  • 170 applications approved under PLISFPI as of September 2025
  • Cumulative investment: ₹9,000 crore; 3.39 lakh jobs (direct + indirect)
  • Processing capacity added: 35 lakh MT per annum
  • Export CAGR: 13.23% (2019-20 to 2024-25) for PLISFPI-approved applicants
  • PLI product sales grew 10.58%; export sales grew 7.41% (latest MoFPI data)
  • Millet-based products: Dedicated ₹800 crore fund; strong growth in nutri-cereal segment linked to International Year of Millets legacy

🧪 50 Irradiation Units + 100 NABL Food Labs (Budget 2024-25)

  • Food Irradiation: Uses ionising radiation (gamma rays, X-rays, electron beams) to eliminate pathogens, extend shelf life, control pests in stored grains without chemicals
  • 50 multi-product irradiation units proposed — addresses EU's rejection of Indian exports due to SPS compliance failures
  • India currently has limited irradiation capacity (mainly BARC-affiliated units)
  • 100 NABL-accredited food testing labs: NABL (National Accreditation Board for Testing and Calibration Laboratories) accreditation ensures internationally recognised quality testing
  • Addresses the 527 EU rejection incidents (2020-24) — critical for export market access
  • Budget 2025-26: ₹4,364 crore total MoFPI allocation — continued emphasis

📊 World Food India 2024 — Key Highlights

  • India hosted World Food India 2024 — third edition (after 2017 and 2023)
  • Showcases India's food processing capacity and investment opportunities to global investors
  • Total FDI in food processing: US$13.1 billion (April 2000–March 2025)
  • Agri + processed food exports: US$49.4 billion (2024-25)
  • Processed food's share in total agri exports: 20.4% — growing steadily
  • India's organic food market: US$1.9 billion (2024) → projected US$10.8 billion by 2033

🏷️ FSSAI Updates 2024 — Labelling & Fortification Regulations

  • FSSAI released State Food Safety Index (SFSI) 2023-24 — ranks states on food safety compliance
  • FSS (Fortification of Foods) Amendment Regulations, 2024 (September 18, 2024) — draft published for modifying sub-regulation (4) of Regulation 7; public comments invited
  • 2025 FSSAI focus: Stricter labelling, organic food standards, consumer awareness campaigns
  • Food Import Rejection Alert (FIRA) Portal launched — real-time alerts on rejected food imports
  • India participated in 44th Codex Committee on Nutrition (October 2024) — pushed for global guidelines on probiotics
  • FSSAI signed MoU with Brazil's Ministry of Agriculture (September 2024) — food safety collaboration
9. UPSC Mains Previous Year Questions
2023
How has the food processing sector in India benefited from recent government initiatives? What challenges remain in realising its full potential? Discuss.
Introduction: Food processing — declared "Sunrise Sector"; US$354.5 billion market (2024); 6th largest globally; critical for farmer income, rural employment, food security, and export growth.

Benefits from Government Initiatives:
  1. PLI Scheme: ₹9,000 Cr investment; 3.39 lakh jobs; 35 lakh MT capacity; export CAGR 13.23% — clear measurable impact
  2. PMKSY: 53 lakh farmers benefited; 7.6 lakh+ employment; cold chain expansion; agro-processing clusters
  3. PMFME: 1.62 lakh+ loans to micro-enterprises; SHG seed capital for 3.65 lakh members; ODOP model for local food identity
  4. 100% FDI: Attracted Nestlé (₹5,000 Cr), PepsiCo; total US$13.1 billion FDI (2000-2025)
  5. PSL classification: Food and cold chain infrastructure — easier credit access for entrepreneurs
  6. Budget 2024-25: 50 irradiation units + 100 NABL labs + National Makhana Board — addressing specific gaps
Remaining Challenges:
  1. Fragmented supply chain: 86% small/marginal farmers; multiple intermediaries; farmers get only 30-35% consumer price
  2. Cold chain deficit: ₹90,000 crore annual post-harvest loss; 25–30% fruit/vegetable waste
  3. EU rejections: 527 Indian products flagged (2020-24) — quality and SPS compliance failures
  4. Skilled workforce: Only 3% formally trained — innovation and quality constrained
  5. Informality: 75% activity unorganised; PMFME's 2 lakh target barely scratches the surface
  6. PLI underutilisation: Large share of PLISFPI funds historically underutilised — mostly large corporates benefiting
Conclusion: India's food processing potential — "Apple model for food processing" — requires sustained policy continuity, stronger MSME focus, cold chain infrastructure, and quality harmonisation with global standards.
2021
The food processing industry in India is one of the largest in the world but its share in the overall economy is marginal. Critically analyse this paradox and suggest measures to accelerate the sector's growth.
The Paradox: India — food and grocery market 6th largest globally; food processing industry 5th in production/consumption/export; 2nd largest producer of fruits/vegetables; 1st in milk — yet food processing contributes only ~1.8% of total overall GVA (at current prices). It contributes 8.39% of Agri GVA and 8.80% of Manufacturing GVA. Only ~10% of India's agricultural output is processed (vs 80%+ in developed economies).

Reasons for the Paradox:
  1. Predominantly primary-level processing (milling, cleaning) — little secondary/tertiary value addition
  2. 75% activity in unorganised sector — low productivity, no economies of scale
  3. Poor cold chain → only primary produce traded; value-added processing not viable
  4. Small farm sizes → inconsistent raw material quality → processors can't guarantee uniform product
  5. Weak consumer brand culture historically; now changing with urbanisation
  6. Regulatory burden discourages formalisation and scaling
Measures to Accelerate:
  1. Cold chain build-out: PPP model; cold chain PSL status; dedicated cold chain fund
  2. FPO integration: Link 10,000 FPOs to processors for aggregation and quality consistency
  3. ODOP + PMFME: Scale ODOP clusters for geographic concentration of processing activity
  4. Export quality: 50 irradiation units + 100 NABL labs + FSSAI-APEDA harmonisation
  5. Contract farming: Formalise processor-farmer contracts under Contract Farming Act 2018
  6. Skill development: Food technology institutions at district level; PMKVY sector-specific modules
  7. Tech adoption: IoT cold chain monitoring; blockchain traceability; AI demand forecasting
2019
Food fortification is the most effective way to combat hidden hunger in India. Do you agree? Critically examine the role of FSSAI in ensuring food safety and standards.
Food Fortification — Context: India's triple burden of malnutrition. Hidden hunger (micronutrient deficiency) affects 57% women (anaemia), 67% children (6-59 months). Iodised salt since 1962 — eliminated goitre — shows fortification works.

Arguments Supporting Fortification as Effective:
  1. Passive intake through normal food habits — no consumer behaviour change needed
  2. Cost-effective at scale — rice fortification costs ~₹1–2 per person per year
  3. Staples reach all income groups through PDS — universal coverage potential
  4. WHO/WFP endorse fortification as evidence-based intervention for micronutrient deficiency
  5. Fortified rice via PMGKAY/PM-POSHAN reaches 80 crore beneficiaries — unprecedented scale
Critical Concerns / Limitations:
  1. Not a standalone solution — dietary diversity needed for holistic nutrition
  2. Risk of hypervitaminosis (excess synthetic vitamins); conflict of interest in industry-funded studies
  3. Excludes informal rice millers — disproportionate burden on small players
  4. Fortification addresses symptoms; structural causes (poverty, agricultural diversity, women's education) must also be addressed
  5. FSSAI's 2024 amendment draft signals ongoing recalibration of mandatory fortification scope
FSSAI's Role:
  1. Statutory body under FSS Act 2006 — sets standards for food safety, labelling, fortification
  2. Eat Right India movement; State Food Safety Index; FIRA portal for import rejections
  3. International engagement: Codex Committee, bilateral MoUs (Brazil, Bhutan)
  4. Trans fatty acid (TFA) cap at 2% from January 2022 — cardiovascular disease prevention
  5. Challenges: Enforcement at last mile; 75% unorganised sector compliance weak
Conclusion: Fortification is necessary but not sufficient — it must complement dietary diversification, income enhancement, and agricultural transformation for sustainable nutritional security.
📝 Practice MCQs
Food Processing, Mega Food Parks & Food Fortification | GS Paper III Level
Q 1
Consider the following statements about the Mega Food Park Scheme (MFPS) in India:
1. The scheme follows a "hub and spoke" model with a Central Processing Centre (CPC) at its core, linked to Primary Processing Centres and Collection Centres.
2. The Mega Food Park Scheme has been discontinued from 01 April 2021, with only committed liabilities being honoured.
3. As of 2024, there are 41 fully operational Mega Food Parks across India.
4. The scheme is a component under PM Kisan SAMPADA Yojana (PMKSY).
Which of the above are CORRECT?
Statement 3 is WRONG: 41 Mega Food Parks were approved over the scheme's lifetime — not all became operational. Only 24 of the 41 approved parks became fully operational. Statement 4 is partially outdated: The Mega Food Park was a component scheme under PMKSY, but since discontinuation in April 2021, it exists only for committed liabilities. Statements 1 and 2 are correct: The hub-and-spoke model (CPC + PPCs + CCs) was the design; and the scheme was discontinued on 01.04.2021. Its functions are now absorbed into PMKSY's Agro-Processing Clusters and Unit Scheme components. Correct answer: (c).
Q 2
With reference to the PM Formalisation of Micro Food Processing Enterprises (PMFME) Scheme, consider the following:
1. PMFME was launched under the Atmanirbhar Bharat Abhiyan with a total outlay of ₹10,000 crore.
2. The scheme targets 2 lakh unorganised micro food processing units through credit-linked subsidies.
3. PMFME is the first-ever Government scheme specifically for micro food processing enterprises.
4. The scheme mandates One District One Product (ODOP) as the approach for targeting beneficiaries.
Which are CORRECT?
All four statements are correct. PMFME (launched June 2020): ₹10,000 crore under Atmanirbhar Bharat (Statement 1 ✅); Targets 2 lakh micro-units with credit-linked subsidy of 35% of eligible project cost, max ₹10 lakh per unit (Statement 2 ✅); It is indeed the first-ever government scheme specifically for micro food processing enterprises — earlier schemes covered larger units (Statement 3 ✅); ODOP (One District One Product) is the core approach — each district nominates one product aligned with local agricultural strength for cluster development under PMFME (Statement 4 ✅). Additional data: 1.62 lakh+ loans sanctioned; 3.65 lakh SHG members approved for seed capital; 76 incubation centres approved. Correct answer: (b).
Q 3
Which of the following food vehicles are currently covered under mandatory (not voluntary) fortification regulations in India, as per FSSAI?
This is a nuanced question. Iodised salt has been mandatory since 1962 under NIDDCP — the oldest and most established mandatory fortification. Rice fortification in welfare schemes (PDS, PM-POSHAN, ICDS) has been mandated and extended to December 2028 (Cabinet October 2024). However, edible oil and milk fortification (with Vitamin A and D) were issued as draft mandatory notifications in January 2021 — these remain under deliberation and have faced pushback; a September 2024 FSSAI amendment draft modifies these regulations. Wheat flour fortification remains voluntary with FSSAI standards (2018). Option (d) is wrong — not all five are mandatory. Option (b) incorrectly states wheat flour is mandatory. Option (c) is the most accurate — salt (iodine, since 1962) and rice in welfare schemes (2024 onwards) are the clear mandatory cases. Correct answer: (c).
Q 4
Consider the following about the PLI Scheme for Food Processing Industry (PLISFPI):
1. The PLI scheme for food processing was launched in 2021 with a total outlay of ₹10,900 crore over 6 years (FY 2021-22 to FY 2026-27).
2. The scheme specifically includes a dedicated ₹800 crore fund for millet-based food products.
3. Agricultural and food processing exports from PLISFPI-approved applicants grew at 13.23% CAGR from 2019-20 to 2024-25.
4. The PLI scheme for food processing has generated more than 10 lakh jobs so far.
Which are CORRECT?
Statement 4 is WRONG: PLISFPI has generated approximately 3.39 lakh jobs (direct and indirect) as of September 2025 — not 10 lakh. The original target was 2.5 lakh jobs by 2026-27, and the scheme has exceeded this target at 3.39 lakh — but 10 lakh is a significant overstatement. Statements 1, 2, and 3 are correct: ₹10,900 crore outlay (Statement 1 ✅); ₹800 crore millet fund — introduced in FY 2022-23 to leverage International Year of Millets momentum (Statement 2 ✅); 13.23% CAGR in exports from 2019-20 to 2024-25 for approved applicants (Statement 3 ✅). Processing capacity added: 35 lakh MT per annum. Correct answer: (b).
Q 5
With reference to India's food processing sector, which of the following statements is/are CORRECT?
1. India's food processing sector is the 6th largest in the world, contributing ~9% to GVA in the agriculture sector.
2. Farmers in India realise about 65–70% of the value of their produce, similar to developed economies.
3. The EU flagged 527 Indian food products between September 2020 and April 2024 due to quality/safety issues.
4. Only about 3% of India's food processing workforce has formal training.
Statement 2 is WRONG — this is a critical fact for UPSC. Indian farmers receive only 30–35% of the consumer price for their produce, compared to 65–70% in developed economies. This stark gap — caused by fragmented supply chains, multiple intermediaries, and weak farmer-processor linkages — is one of the strongest arguments for developing the food processing sector in India. Statement 1 is CORRECT (6th largest globally; ~9% of agri GVA). Statement 3 is CORRECT (527 EU rejections 2020-24 — a key data point for India's food export quality challenge). Statement 4 is CORRECT (only 3% formally trained — explains quality issues and slow tech adoption). Correct answer: (c) — but since options (b) and (c) show the same content, the answer is (c): 1, 3 and 4 only.
Q 6
The Union Budget 2024-25 announced the establishment of a National Makhana Board. Makhana (foxnuts) is primarily produced in which Indian state, and what is India's share of global makhana production?
India produces approximately 90% of the world's makhana (foxnuts), and production is concentrated in Bihar — particularly the districts of Darbhanga, Madhubani, Sitamarhi, Saharsa, and Supaul. Mithila Makhana received a Geographical Indication (GI) tag in 2022. The National Makhana Board announced in Budget 2024-25 aims to formalise the value chain, promote branding and GI positioning, and boost exports to superfood markets in the US, EU, and Middle East. Makhana cultivation is water-intensive (wetland/pond-based) and provides livelihood to thousands of farmers and divers (Mallah community). This is a high-probability current affairs fact for both Prelims and Mains. Correct answer: (b).
0 / 6

Book a Free Demo Class

April 2026
M T W T F S S
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
27282930  
Categories

Get free Counselling and ₹25,000 Discount

Fill the form – Our experts will call you within 30 mins.