Common Food Processing Incubation Centre for Shallots launched

Q.  Which common food processing incubation centre was launched in Chettikulam village?
- Published on 01 Sep 17

a. Small Onions
b. Shallots
c. Tomatoes
d. Both a and b
e. All the above

ANSWER: Both a and b
 
Common Food Processing Incubation Centre for Shallots launchedSmt Harsimrat Kaur Badal, Union Minister for Food Processing Industries launched Common Food Processing Incubation Center for Shallots (Small Onions) in Chettikulam village.

This is in Perambalur District of Tamil Nadu through video conferencing.

Smt Harsimrat Kaur Badal said that it is a historic & auspicious occasion for Tamil Nadu and Chettikulam Village in particular.

She also congratulated Indian Institute of Food Processing Technology (IIFPT), Thanjavur for their initiatives to help double farmers’ income by 2022.

She also said that farmers in Perambalur District are producing 70000 tons of shallots per year in a cultivation area of 8000 hectares, in spite of the increasing difficulty in cultivation due to increase in prices of inputs, unpredictable weather, disease outbreak and not getting adequate prices in the market.

This Central Processing Center for Shallots in Perambalur will ensure that no shallots are getting wasted, increase farmers’ income and also ensure availability of shallots to consumers.

This Onion processing technology should be taken to all parts of India.

Mission Onion: Know More
  • Central Food Processing Center for Shallots in Chettikulam, Perambalur District is part of the Mission Onion in improving the lives of Onion farmers in this area.
  • This centre will help farmers’ to double their income through value addition. This centre will process Shallots and produce 4 Shallot products viz. Fresh Shallot, Peeled Shallot, Onion Powder, Onion Paste, Onion Flakes.
  • IIFPT is working on Mission Coconut which will be launched next year on World Coconut Day (2nd September 2018).
Background
  • Perambalur district is the hub for small onions (Shallots) cultivation in over 8000 hectares producing around 65,000 to 70,000 tonnes every year.
  • Farmers reported massive losses due to conventional methods of handling and storage.
  • Stakeholders from this region expressed their need to provide technological solutions to minimize wastage, particularly during seasons with surplus production.
  • The farmer producers union which will be involved in this initiative was also launched recently.

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