CM Sai Highlights Makhana Farming Push in Dhamtari
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Chhattisgarh Chief Minister Vishnu Deo Sai on Saturday, 11 July 2026, highlighted the rapid expansion of makhana (fox nut) cultivation in Dhamtari district, calling it a model of self-reliant agriculture driven by crop diversification, modern technology, and the active participation of women's self-help groups.
In his post on X, CM Sai stated that makhana farming now covers more than 105 acres in the district, opening new avenues of employment and livelihood for local farmers. He wrote: 'नवाचार और फसल विविधीकरण से धमतरी जिला आत्मनिर्भर कृषि की नई पहचान बन रहा है' ('Through innovation and crop diversification, Dhamtari district is becoming a new identity for self-reliant agriculture').
Context
Dhamtari, a district in southern Chhattisgarh with a predominantly agrarian economy, has historically been associated with paddy cultivation. The shift toward makhana — a high-value wetland crop — represents a deliberate move to diversify farm income and reduce dependence on a single crop. CM Sai's post underscores the state government's intent to position Dhamtari as a replicable example of agricultural transformation.
Makhana cultivation has traditionally been concentrated in Bihar, but central and state governments have piloted its expansion into other eastern and central Indian states using improved agronomic practices and collective farming models over the past decade.
Policy Backdrop
The initiative aligns with the broader Atmanirbhar Bharat framework launched in 2020, which promoted local crop value chains and reduced import dependence for produce including makhana. Crop diversification has been a policy priority since the mid-2010s, aimed at easing water stress caused by paddy monoculture and raising farmer incomes through wetland and horticultural alternatives.
Women's self-help groups operating under India's National Rural Livelihoods Mission (NRLM) have been integrated into such efforts to manage production, processing, and marketing at the grassroots level. CM Sai specifically credited 'स्व-सहायता समूहों की बहनों की सक्रिय भागीदारी' ('the active participation of sisters from self-help groups') as a key driver of makhana farming's new identity in the district.
Stakeholders and Impact
The primary beneficiaries are Dhamtari's farming households and women members of rural self-help groups, who gain both income and agency through participation in the makhana value chain. Better utilisation of water resources — a key concern in a paddy-belt district — is cited as an additional dividend of the shift.
Makhana commands significantly higher market prices than paddy, making it an attractive diversification crop for smallholders. The integration of NRLM-linked women's collectives into production and processing can also create downstream employment in cleaning, grading, and marketing of the crop.
What's Next
The state government's focus will likely turn to scaling acreage beyond the current 105-plus acres, establishing processing infrastructure, and securing stable market linkages for Dhamtari's makhana produce. Observers will watch for specific allocations in upcoming Chhattisgarh agriculture budgets or policy documents that institutionalise this model and extend it to other districts with similar wetland profiles.
If the Dhamtari pilot demonstrates sustained income gains, it could serve as a template for the broader Chhattisgarh government strategy on non-paddy crop promotion — a significant shift for one of India's major rice-producing states.