Fruit Area Expansion
About this Scheme
The scheme aims to increase fruit production by encouraging farmers to establish new orchards, providing fruit plants at a 50% subsidy to support the expansion of fruit cultivation across Uttarakhand.
About This Scheme
The scheme βFruit Area Expansionβ is implemented by the Department of Horticulture, Government of Uttarakhand. It aims to increase fruit production by encouraging farmers to establish new orchards, providing fruit plants at a 50% subsidy to support the expansion of fruit cultivation across Uttarakhand.
Benefits
Increasing production by establishing new orchards.
Fruit plants are provided at a subsidy of 50% of the total cost.
For developing orchards, fruit plants such as mango, guava, pomegranate, apple, litchi, plum, peach, apricot, walnut, citrus, malta, kiwi, dragon fruit, etc., are provided to farmers. (For example, if a walnut plant costs βΉ400/-, the farmer has to deposit βΉ200/- at the concerned Horticulture Mobile team Centre, and the government bears the remaining βΉ200/- as subsidy, so the farmer receives the plant for βΉ200/-.)
Eligibility Criteria
The applicant must be a resident of Uttarakhand.
The applicant must be a farmer and hold a Udhyan Card.
The farmer must either own agricultural land or have land on lease.
If the farmer owns land, the maximum land allowed per beneficiary is 4 hectares and the minimum land allowed is 0.02 hectares.
The maximum land area allowed under the scheme is 4 hectares.
Application Process
Apply Offline
Application forms can be obtained from the officers or staff at the Horticulture Mobile team Centre. Forms are also available for download from the departmentβs website:
https://shm.uk.gov.in
.
For winter planting, applications must be submitted between September and October, and for rainy season planting, applications must be submitted between April and June. Applicants are required to submit land-related documents, such as Khasra and Khatauni, along with the application form. For leased land, additional documents including the lease certificate, Aadhaar card, PAN card, Udhyan Card, bank account details, and mobile number are required.
Currently, the application process is offline. Farmers must submit their completed application along with the required documents to the respective Horticulture Mobile team Centre. The application format also serves as a proposal. If a farmer faces any difficulty in filling out the form, the staff at the respective centres are responsible for providing assistance.
For applications under centrally-sponsored schemes, once the proposal is submitted, the Horticulture Mobile team Centre forwards it to the district level. From there, applications are sent to the state level, and then to the Government of India. After the action plan is approved by the Government of India, targets are communicated back to the district level through the Directorate.
For state-sponsored schemes, applications are sent from the Horticulture Mobile team Centre to the district level, and then to the Directorate. Once the Directorate approves the farmersβ proposals, approval or work orders are issued to the districts as per the Government Order.
After a farmerβs proposal is approved, the district officer sends an acceptance letter and also informs the farmer via phone. Subsequently, the farmer can purchase fruit saplings from the relevant Horticulture Mobile team Centre at a 50% subsidy. Beneficiaries under the scheme are selected on a first-come, first-served basis, subject to budget availability.
Official Source: View on myScheme.gov.in
Scheme Benefits
- Increasing production by establishing new orchards.
- Fruit plants are provided at a subsidy of 50% of the total cost.
- For developing orchards, fruit plants such as mango, guava, pomegranate, apple, litchi, plum, peach, apricot, walnut, citrus, malta, kiwi, dragon fruit, etc., are provided to farmers. (For example, if a walnut plant costs βΉ400/-, the farmer has to deposit βΉ200/- at the concerned Horticulture Mobile team Centre, and the government bears the remaining βΉ200/- as subsidy, so the farmer receives the plant for βΉ200/-.)