CM Dhami Announces 80% Subsidy for Apple, Kiwi, Dragon Fruit
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Uttarakhand Chief Minister Pushkar Singh Dhami on Monday, 13 July 2026, announced that the state government is providing subsidies of up to 80 per cent to farmers cultivating apple, kiwi, and dragon fruit, framing the move as part of a broader push to make Uttarakhand a leading fruit-producing state in India.
Context
Posting on X, Chief Minister Dhami wrote — 'हमारी सरकार की किसान हितैषी नीतियों से प्रदेश में आधुनिक एवं व्यावसायिक बागवानी को नई गति मिल रही है' ['Our government's farmer-friendly policies are giving new momentum to modern and commercial horticulture in the state']. He added that the government's resolve is to increase farmers' incomes, create new employment opportunities at the local level, and establish Uttarakhand as a front-ranking state in fruit production.
The announcement centres on three high-value crops: apple, kiwi, and dragon fruit — each suited to different agro-climatic pockets within the Himalayan state. The subsidy of up to 80 per cent, as stated by the Chief Minister, is aimed at lowering the financial barrier for farmers looking to shift away from traditional cereal cultivation.
Policy Backdrop
The push aligns with the Central government's 2016 initiative to double farmers' income, which identified horticulture as a priority sector for higher returns and crop diversification. The Mission for Integrated Development of Horticulture (MIDH), a Central scheme, has provided a framework and funding channel for state-level horticulture subsidies for over two decades.
Uttarakhand's diverse agro-climatic zones — from the temperate upper hills to the subtropical foothills — make it naturally suited for a range of fruit crops. Apple cultivation has historically been concentrated in the higher elevations, while crops such as kiwi and dragon fruit represent a newer diversification push into mid-hill and lower-altitude zones. Indian hill states have increasingly used targeted subsidies to shift farmers toward high-value fruits that command better market prices and reduce dependence on rain-fed cereals.
Stakeholders and Impact
The primary beneficiaries are hill farmers and horticulture growers across Uttarakhand, many of whom face thin margins on traditional crops and are affected by rural out-migration. A subsidy at the scale announced — up to 80 per cent — could substantially reduce the capital expenditure required for orchard establishment, including saplings, irrigation, and protective infrastructure.
Beyond individual farm incomes, the initiative is framed as a local employment driver. Commercial horticulture generates on-farm and ancillary jobs in picking, grading, packaging, and cold-chain logistics — activities that can create livelihoods in villages and slow migration to urban centres. Neighbouring hill states have pursued similar models, with mixed but broadly positive outcomes where market linkages were established alongside subsidy support.
What's Next
Observers will watch for district-level rollout details, including how the subsidy is disbursed, which crops receive the highest support rates, and how many farmers are enrolled in the first agricultural season. Any supplementary budget allocations or cluster development plans tabled in the Uttarakhand state assembly will indicate the depth of the government's financial commitment. Production figures for the three promoted crops over the next two seasons will be a key measure of on-ground impact.
If the horticulture subsidy programme achieves meaningful scale, it could position Uttarakhand as a model for other hill states seeking to raise rural incomes through high-value agriculture — and reinforce the state government's farmer-welfare credentials ahead of future electoral cycles.