Hindustan Times (Delhi)

New bamboo mission to come up for Cabinet nod

PLAN Govt aims to allow free movement and create demand for the raw material

- Zia Haq zia.haq@htlive.com

NEWDELHI: The Union government has finalised a restructur­ed national bamboo mission to promote commercial bamboo cultivatio­n and link growers to industry in a bid to boost farmer incomes amid rural dissent.

It hopes commercial plantation­s and product developmen­t in the bamboo sector will help in achieving its target of doubling farmers’ income by 2022.

The new mission will involve the participat­ion of 12 different ministries. It has been proposed that the Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana, the government’s flagship programme for housing, will utilise the scheme to install bamboo houses.

For the mission, expected to be brought before the Cabinet committee on economic affairs soon, the agricultur­e ministry has held consultati­ons with representa­tives from constructi­on and paper industries, apart from architects and the Numaligarh Refinery Limited in Assam.

The Northeast, Uttarakhan­d, Maharashtr­a, West Bengal and Chhattisga­rh are key bamboogrow­ing states. “We are looking to explore the full value chain. The focus is to shift from just

handicraft­s to high-end products, such as flooring, wall cladding and furniture,” an official familiar with the developmen­t said.

“We examined the earlier bamboo mission and found significan­t gaps. The value chain linking farmers to markets was missing. The restructur­ed mission aims to plug these gaps,” the official said.

The new bamboo mission will

have a three-level subsidy. Firstly, farmers growing bamboo on a commercial basis will get input subsidies on a per-hectare model. Secondly, entreprene­urs will also get subsidies to set up processing centres. Thirdly, industries will qualify for a credit-linked back-ended subsidy, meaning they will be eligible to take loans for bamboo business and will be given a subsidy once the project is completed.

The proposal for a revised bambooprog­rammewasma­deby Union finance minister Arun Jaitley in his budget speech, with an outlay of ₹1,290 crore.

Since such plantation­s have higher carbon sequestrat­ion, they are environmen­tally sustainabl­e too, the official said. Carbon sequestrat­ion is the process by which carbon is removed from the environmen­t.

Making a key regulatory change, the cabinet in 2017 approved an amendment in the Indian Forest Act 1927 to exempt bamboo grown in non-forest areas from the requiremen­t of a permit. Bamboo in such areas has been designated as a grass, rather than a tree. India has about 136 species of bamboo, making it the country with the highest biodiversi­ty and the second-highest bamboo area, after China.

The government believes the full potential of the bamboo sector could not be realised because growers faced a number of environmen­tal restrictio­ns on felling, transporta­tion and selling.

The new mission aims to allow free movement of bamboo and create demand for the raw material as well as encourage growth of small and medium industries dependent on bamboo.

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