Food Processing Ecosystem in India

Syllabus: GS3/ Economy; Food Processing

Context

  • India’s food processing sector has emerged as a critical link between agriculture and industry, driving value addition, improving farmer incomes, and expanding export potential.

Food Processing Sector 

  • Food processing refers to transformation of raw agricultural materials into consumable products, ranging from simple cleaning to complex industrial manufacturing.
  • It operates at three levels:
    • Primary processing involves cleaning, grading, and packaging of produce.
    • Secondary processing converts raw inputs into intermediate products such as flour.
    • Tertiary processing produces ready-to-eat or ready-to-cook food products.

Importance of the Sector

  • Food processing enhances shelf life and improves food safety by reducing contamination risks.
  • It supports nutrition and convenience, enabling availability of processed and ready-to-eat foods for urban populations.
  • The sector strengthens farmer incomes and rural employment by creating demand for agricultural produce and generating jobs across the value chain.
  • The sector contributes significantly to the economy, with Gross Value Added increasing from ₹1.34 lakh crore (2014–15) to ₹2.24 lakh crore (2023–24).
  • It plays a key role in export growth, with processed food exports rising from 13.7% to 20.4% share in agricultural exports (2014–15 to 2024–25).

Drivers of Growth in Food Processing Sector

  • India’s demographic dividend and urbanisation are increasing demand for processed foods, with the market projected to grow from USD 263 billion to USD 470 billion by 2025.
  • Digital transformation has enabled direct farmer-to-market linkages and expansion of e-commerce and food delivery platforms.
  • Supportive policies such as 100% Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) and schemes like PLISFPI have boosted investment.
  • Innovation in health-oriented and millet-based products and adoption of agri-tech solutions are improving product diversity and quality.

Production Linked Incentive Scheme for Food Processing Industry 

  • The PLISFPI provides incentives based on incremental sales. It has been a major policy push to strengthen this ecosystem and position India as a global processing hub.
  • The scheme aims to create global Indian food brands while increasing production and exports.
  • It is structured into three components:
    • Category I focuses on large-scale manufacturing of key segments such as ready-to-eat foods, processed fruits and vegetables, marine products, and mozzarella cheese.
    • Category II promotes innovation among Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs), including organic and niche products.
    • Category III supports branding and marketing abroad, with reimbursement up to 50% of expenses subject to limits.
  • A dedicated component for millet-based products promotes value addition and diversification.

Current State of the Food Processing Sector 

  • 165 applications have been approved across 274 project locations, indicating strong industry participation.
    • Out of 165 approved applications, 69 are MSMEs, showing strong inclusion of small enterprises. MSMEs have received targeted incentives, supporting innovation and decentralised growth.
  • Investments of about ₹9,207 crore have been mobilised, with ₹2,162.55 crore incentives disbursed.
  • Processing capacity has increased by 34 lakh metric tonnes per annum, strengthening infrastructure.
  • Employment generation has reached 3.39 lakh jobs, exceeding the target of 2.5 lakh.
  • Processed food exports grew at a Compound Annual Growth Rate of 13.23%, with cumulative exports of ₹89,053 crore (2021–2025).

Challenges faced by the Sector

  • The sector faces a fragmented supply chain, with over 86% of farmers being small and marginal, limiting scale and efficiency.
  • Infrastructure deficits, especially in cold storage, lead to 25–30% post-harvest losses, costing about ₹92,651 crore annually.
  • A complex regulatory framework involving multiple agencies increases compliance burden and uncertainty.
  • There is a skill gap, with only 3% of the workforce formally trained.
  • Limited access to finance, particularly for MSMEs, restricts investment in technology and expansion.
  • Issues related to quality standards and export compliance result in rejection of products in global markets.
  • Environmental concerns such as plastic packaging and sustainability challenges are increasing regulatory pressure.
  • Price volatility in agricultural commodities creates uncertainty in production and pricing.

Government Initiatives

  • Key schemes include Pradhan Mantri Kisan Sampada Yojana and Pradhan Mantri Formalisation of Micro Food Processing Enterprises Scheme. 
  • A ₹2,000 crore Special Food Processing Fund has been created with NABARD to support investment.

Way Forward

  • Developing integrated food processing clusters near production centres. 
  • Adoption of technology-driven supply chains using artificial intelligence, blockchain, and Internet of Things. 
  • Financial reforms such as sector-specific credit schemes and credit guarantees.
  • Strengthening quality standardisation and global compliance will enhance export competitiveness.
  • Regulatory simplification through a single-window clearance system. 
  • Promoting sustainable processing and eco-friendly packaging. 
  • Increasing investment in research and development.

Source: PIB

 

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