Government launches Rs 200 crore scheme for innovation in agro-industry

The scheme is designed to provide necessary skill set for setting up business enterprises and also to facilitate the market linkages.

Government launches Rs 200 crore scheme for innovation in agro-industry
NEW DELHI: The government today launched a Rs 200 crore scheme to set up a network of technology and incubation centres to accelerate entrepreneurship and promote start-ups for innovation and entrepreneurship in agro-industry.

"The Scheme for Promotion of Innovation, Entrepreneurship and Agro-Industry will open vistas of incubation landscape to the micro segment of the vast rural economy," Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSME) Minister Kalraj Mishra said at the launch.

"The scheme is designed to provide necessary skill set for setting up business enterprises and also to facilitate the market linkages available to entrepreneurs and to provide hand holding for a critical period to ensure self sustainability," he said.

The scheme envisages creation of a framework for start-up promotion through Small Industries Development Bank of India (SIDBI) by using innovative means of finance like equity, quasi-equity, angel fund, venture capital fund, impact funds and challenge funds.

In order to ensure that credit is available for start-ups, the MSME Ministry has created a fund of funds of Rs 60 crore to be channelised through SIDBI.

"A fund of funds has been created under SIDBI and Rs 60 crore has been earmarked for the purpose," Joint Secretary in the MSME Ministry Anil Kumar said.
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"Success of the scheme will lie in how we are able to converge the advantages and knowledge of various stakeholders. The idea is to provide a platform on which multiple stakeholders can work together and address the employment needs of rural areas," MSME Secretary Madhav Lal said.

"We are launching the scheme today. We will add more components to the scheme as we move along," he added.

The partner institutions would be provided Rs 3 lakh per innovative idea selected for nurturing.

For successful commercialisation and mentoring, a grant of Rs 1 lakh per year for three years subject to a maximum of Rs 3 lakh would be given.
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The scheme also entails Rs 62.50 crore fund for setting up of incubation centres by National Small Industries Corporation or Khadi and Village Industries Commission or Coir Board or any other institution/agency of the state or central government.

Besides, Rs 61.50 crore has been earmarked for setting up of technology incubation centres.
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A sum of Rs 2 crore has been allocated for creation, updation and maintenance of database of technology centres network while Rs 17.75 crore will be spent on capacity building, including awards, surveys, studies, exposure visits and engagement of consultants.

The scheme emanates from Budget presented in July by Finance Minister Arun Jaitley, who had proposed a technology centre network to promote innovation, entrepreneurship and agro-industry by setting up a fund with a corpus of Rs 200 crore.
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8 awesome indigenous innovations you must see
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Text: TNN

Good ideas surely need wings. In September 2014, India's blockbuster project, the Mangalyaan robotic probe -the cheapest of interplanetary missions -was successfully launched into the orbit of Mars. The next day Prime Minister Narendra Modi unveiled 'Make in India', a campaign that seeks to make the country a manufacturing powerhouse and hopes to work its magic in creating jobs, increasing purchasing power and building a larger market.

Well before this catchphrase was coined, India's rich talent pool had, as ever, hunkered down to business, although in the form of small enterprises. Many of these homegrown gadgets and utilities are being used in homes, farms, hospitals and elsewhere. Each innovation is, in its own way, the best thing since sliced bread.

In the new world of competition, it's after all no longer enough to do the same thing better.

Here are random samples of indigenous innovations from across the country...
Text: TNN

Good ideas surely need wings. In September 2014, India's blockbuster project, the Mangalyaan robotic probe -the cheapest of interplanetary missions -was successfully launched ..
Read More
Inspired by documentaries on crop-dusting on Discovery Channel, Dulal Adhikari channeled his passion for building model planes into creating a remotecontrolled pesticide-spraying machine that can be fitted to a GPS-guided drone.

"Spraying pesticide on a bigha using the machine will take 10-12 minutes while it would take over 3 hours manually," Adhikari, an official of the Kolkata Municipal Corporation, points out.

The pesticide-spraying drone costs Rs 40,000, has an auto pilot mode, and is fitted with a barometer, a compass and a gyrocontrol ­ instruments that allow the machine to maintain altitude even in a stiff breeze.
Inspired by documentaries on crop-dusting on Discovery Channel, Dulal Adhikari channeled his passion for building model planes into creating a remotecontrolled pesticide-spraying machine that can be ..
Read More
Abhaya, a hearing aid lookalike, is a leap for women's safety.

The brainchild of Cochin University of Science and Technology students, it transmits panic and fear through a phone and triggers an emergency call.

The neurosensor reads brainwaves and heartbeats to activate the voice transmitter and GPS tracker so that the endangered person can be continuously tracked.

Says Vivek Mohan, project mentor, "We will soon move to the next level of brain mapping to help paraplegics."
Abhaya, a hearing aid lookalike, is a leap for women's safety.

The brainchild of Cochin University of Science and Technology students, it transmits panic and fear through a phone and triggers..
Read More
Bengaluru techies K Chandrasekhar and Shyam Vasudev Rao quit their jobs to create 3nethra, a portable, noninvasive eye pre-screening device that can detect five major eye ailments: cataract, glaucoma, diabetic retina, cornea problems, and eye-lens refractive errors.

"We were overwhelmed by the problem of preventable blindness in India," say the techies.

The device saves precious time for ophthalmologists.

It costs one-fifth the price of existing machines, and can be fitted into a suitcase and connected to a PC or laptop via USB.
Bengaluru techies K Chandrasekhar and Shyam Vasudev Rao quit their jobs to create 3nethra, a portable, noninvasive eye pre-screening device that can detect five major eye ailments: cataract, glaucoma..
Read More
When he was a Class 11 student, Bhopal-based Sushant Pattnaik (now 22) was moved by the plight of a wheelchair-bound patient.

It led him to invent a breathing apparatus that, when exhaled into, can control wheelchair directions.

The device is connected to a LED screen which shows options such as directions and gives instructions to control electrical appliances in the vicinity.

This award-winning creation led Pattnail to set up a firm called Scientific Innovation Foundation and invent more gadgets.
When he was a Class 11 student, Bhopal-based Sushant Pattnaik (now 22) was moved by the plight of a wheelchair-bound patient.

It led him to invent a breathing apparatus that, when exhaled int..
Read More
Mumbai-based packager Vinay Mehta has created VENTiT, a hot-food delivery box that has been praised by global pizza experts like Scott Wiener.

Most pizza-delivery boxes trap steam, which results in a soggy crust and breaks down the material itself.

But VENTiT circumvents this problem by building the box in an unusual order, in which vents are cut into the outer and inner liners of the cardboard box, leaving the middle layer intact.

Mehta's design has now been patented in over 100 countries.
Mumbai-based packager Vinay Mehta has created VENTiT, a hot-food delivery box that has been praised by global pizza experts like Scott Wiener.

Most pizza-delivery boxes trap steam, which resu..
Read More
Bihar's power situation was never comfortable, and the problem turned worse after the creation of Jharkhand in 2000.

Now, a man named Gyanesh Pandey has decided to take matters into his own hands.

Pandey, who says his target group is "people living in off-grid areas", uses rice husk as fuel for more than 60 mini-power plants.

They say they generate and distribute electricity to more than 20,000 homes in 250 villages bordering Bihar's West Champaran district.
Bihar's power situation was never comfortable, and the problem turned worse after the creation of Jharkhand in 2000.

Now, a man named Gyanesh Pandey has decided to take matters into his own h..
Read More
This desi geyser, as its humble name suggests, is a modest contraption of galvanized plain sheet that uses cow dung as fuel and can bring water to boil in five minutes flat.

Designed 15 years ago by Paramjit Singh in his small workshop in Jagraon (Ludhiana), it has been replicated by many and is now sold at shops in villages across Punjab. "I have been challenging people about my geyser that can give hot water in 300 seconds," says Paramjit.

He hasn't lost the bet so far.
This desi geyser, as its humble name suggests, is a modest contraption of galvanized plain sheet that uses cow dung as fuel and can bring water to boil in five minutes flat.

Designed 15 years..
Read More
This 'refrigerator' that runs without power, developed by the Central Arid Zone Research Institute, Jodhpur, has addressed local problems of preserving fruits, vegetables and dairy products in the dry heat of Rajasthan.

It is made of bricks, cement and coarse sand and works on the principle of evaporation.

The temperature inside it is 12-15 degrees lower than that outside, while humidity is higher by 85%.

The 'fridge' can preserve 30kg-50 kg of vegetables for 4-5 days in summer and 6-7 days in winter.
This 'refrigerator' that runs without power, developed by the Central Arid Zone Research Institute, Jodhpur, has addressed local problems of preserving fruits, vegetables and dairy products in the dr..
Read More
READ MORE
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