CM Yogi flags four mango pack houses across UP districts
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Context
The CMO post, attributed directly to CM Yogi Adityanath, states in Hindi: 'प्रदेश के अन्नदाता किसानों को प्रोत्साहित करने के लिए आम के चार पैक हाउस सहारनपुर, लखनऊ, अमरोहा और वाराणसी में बनाए गए हैं' — 'To encourage the food-provider farmers of the state, four mango pack houses have been built at Saharanpur, Lucknow, Amroha and Varanasi.' The post further notes that all these modern pack houses are 'functioning strongly.' The announcement comes during the peak mango harvest season, when post-harvest handling is most critical for growers.
Policy Backdrop
Uttar Pradesh is India's largest mango-producing state, and post-harvest losses for perishable fruits have historically been estimated at 15 to 30 per cent, making grading, packaging and cold-chain infrastructure a recurring priority for successive state administrations. The central government's Mission for Integrated Development of Horticulture (MIDH), operational since 2014-15, has provided a funding framework for exactly this kind of pack-house and post-harvest infrastructure. The four locations — spanning western UP (Saharanpur, Amroha), the state capital (Lucknow, home to the prized Dasheri variety), and eastern UP (Varanasi) — reflect a deliberate geographic spread across the state's high-production mango zones. CM Yogi Adityanath, who has led the state since 2017, has consistently positioned horticulture infrastructure as part of a broader farmer-welfare agenda.
Stakeholders and Impact
The primary beneficiaries are mango farmers in and around the four designated districts, who gain access to facilities for sorting, grading, and packaging their produce to meet domestic retail and export standards. Modern pack houses reduce field-to-market transit losses and allow farmers to command better prices by presenting standardised, market-ready consignments. Horticulture processors and aggregators operating in these corridors also stand to benefit from improved supply-chain reliability during the short but intense mango season.
What's Next
Attention will now turn to whether the state expands this network to additional mango-growing districts under ongoing MIDH or state horticulture plans, and whether official data on reduced wastage or improved export volumes from these four sites will be published. The government's ability to demonstrate measurable outcomes — lower post-harvest losses and higher farmer incomes — will determine how this infrastructure investment is assessed in future policy cycles. Any announcement of additional pack houses or linked cold-storage capacity in the coming months would signal the next phase of the programme.