Budget 2026 Could Change Indian Farming Forever: Experts Push For Tech, Climate & Digital Boost
Industry voices ahead of Budget 2026 push for drones, AI, irrigation upgrades and dairy reforms to cut losses, raise incomes and transform farming into a modern, growth-driven sector.

New Delhi: Ahead of the FY27 Budget, agriculture industry leaders and experts are making a strong pitch for increased investments in digital infrastructure, climate-resilient farming practices, and technology adoption to transform a sector that employs nearly half the country's workforce but contributes less than a fifth to national output.
With agriculture and allied sectors supporting about 45 per cent of India's workforce while contributing only around 18 per cent to the gross value added, industry voices say Budget 2026-27 presents a critical opportunity to reposition the sector as an engine of economic growth rather than just a welfare concern.
"Agriculture is increasingly being recognised not merely as a welfare sector, but as a credible engine of economic growth -- one that can drive productivity, employment, rural demand and resilience," said Amit Vatsyayan, Leader, GPS-Agriculture, Livelihood, Social and Skills at EY India.
Dairy sector seeks support Heritage Foods Ltd Executive Director Brahmani Nara pointed to favourable conditions created by the September 2025 GST rationalisation, which has accelerated consumer preference for high-protein, health-focused products like paneer, cheese, ghee, and butter in the organised dairy segment.
With government initiatives like the Rashtriya Gokul Mission and National Digital Livestock Mission integrating over 3,00,000 farmers into the organised ecosystem, Nara outlined three key Budget asks: subsidised access to quality feed and chromosome-sorted semen to boost animal productivity; expanding veterinary college capacity to bridge the gap between India's 68,000 registered veterinarians and the requirement of 110,000-120,000; and increased capital subsidies for mini-dairy units, particularly for women entrepreneurs.
Green infrastructure, tech adoption key Vatsyayan emphasised the need for scaling green infrastructure and climate-resilient irrigation through investments in micro-irrigation, watershed management, aquifer recharge and renewable-powered agri assets.
"From a growth lens, these interventions also act as strong multipliers -- stimulating rural demand, stabilising farm incomes and strengthening food security," he said in a statement.
He also called for expanding public-private partnerships in storage, logistics and agri R&D to reduce post-harvest losses, and focused investments in seed systems to achieve self-reliance in pulses and other nutrition-sensitive commodities.
Drawing from international experience, particularly Japan's farmer school model, Vatsyayan suggested adapting to cluster-based farmer schools anchored in FPOs and Krishi Vigyan Kendras to accelerate technology adoption.
Digital infrastructure push MapMyCrop Founder and CEO Swapnil Jadhav urged the government to champion digital infrastructure and seamless credit linkages to propel precision agriculture at scale.
"Agri-drones, IoT sensors, and AI-driven analytics hold transformative potential to elevate yields, optimise water and fertilizer use, and fortify climate resilience for 140 million farm holdings," he said.
Jadhav called for targeted subsidies, robust PPPs and R&D tax incentives to fast-track integration with national platforms like AGMARK-NET and e-NAM, helping India pivot from input-heavy subsidies to a tech-powered agriculture ecosystem.
Structural reforms needed BDO India Partner for Agriculture Soumyak Biswas highlighted persistent structural challenges, including small and fragmented landholdings, inadequate investment in allied sectors, high post-harvest losses, and underfunded research.
He outlined priorities including scaling climate-smart agriculture by increasing funding for DARE, strengthening allied sectors like livestock and fisheries, empowering FPOs through market-linked strategies and credit guarantees, and incentivising diversification into horticulture, pulses and oilseeds to reduce overdependence on water-intensive crops.
Vatsyayan said the effective roll-out of AGRISTACK as a digital public good could serve as the backbone of this transformation. "By integrating farmer data, land records, credit, insurance, extension and market platforms, AGRISTACK can enable precision targeting, reduce transaction costs and crowd in private investment," he added.
(Disclaimer: This report has been published as part of the auto-generated syndicate wire feed. Apart from the headline, no editing has been done in the copy by ABP Live.)






















