CM Yogi Inaugurates 1-Lakh Capacity Akshaya Patra Kitchen in Gorakhpur
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
The Chief Minister's Office of Uttar Pradesh announced on Thursday, 25 June 2026 that Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath attended the grand inauguration of Akshaya Patra Foundation's centralised kitchen in Gorakhpur, a facility with a capacity of one lakh meals per day.
Context
The official post, shared live from the event, described the ceremony as a 'bhavya udghatan samaroh' (grand inauguration ceremony) of a centralised kitchen with a one-lakh capacity. The facility, established by the Akshaya Patra Foundation, is designed to prepare and supply mid-day meals at industrial scale for school children in the region.
Gorakhpur is the Chief Minister's home constituency and has been the site of several flagship infrastructure and welfare projects under the current state administration. The inauguration underscores the government's continued focus on the city as a model for public-welfare delivery.
Policy Backdrop
The Akshaya Patra Foundation, headquartered in Bengaluru, is one of India's largest NGO-run mid-day meal programmes, operating centralised kitchens across multiple states in partnership with state governments. Uttar Pradesh entered into a partnership with the Foundation around 2017–2018 to scale delivery under the national PM POSHAN scheme, which mandates nutritious cooked meals for children enrolled in government and government-aided schools.
Centralised kitchens of this scale are designed to address longstanding concerns around hygiene, leakage, and inconsistent meal quality that have historically plagued decentralised mid-day meal delivery. Technology-enabled, high-capacity facilities allow for standardised preparation, better supply-chain oversight, and the ability to serve a large number of schools from a single hub.
Uttar Pradesh has progressively expanded this model to multiple districts, positioning public-NGO partnerships as a key mechanism for improving both nutrition outcomes and school attendance among children from economically weaker sections.
Stakeholders and Impact
The primary beneficiaries of the new kitchen are school children across Gorakhpur division, particularly those enrolled in government schools who depend on the mid-day meal as a critical daily source of nutrition. For many children from low-income households, the mid-day meal programme is a significant factor in both school enrolment and daily attendance.
A kitchen rated at one lakh meals per day has the potential to serve a substantial share of the school-going population across Gorakhpur and surrounding areas. Beyond nutrition, the facility is expected to generate local employment in kitchen operations, logistics, and supply-chain management.
The Akshaya Patra Foundation, as the operating partner, brings established expertise in food safety protocols, centralised procurement, and large-scale kitchen management — factors that state governments cite when choosing NGO partners over purely departmental delivery models.
What's Next
Attention will now turn to the operational rollout: how quickly the kitchen reaches full capacity, the number of schools and students covered in its first phase, and whether daily meal-service data shows measurable improvements in attendance figures across Gorakhpur division. Any expansion of the Uttar Pradesh government's partnership with Akshaya Patra to additional districts would signal a broader strategic shift toward centralised, NGO-led nutrition delivery across the state. The inauguration also sets a benchmark that other divisions in Uttar Pradesh may be expected to meet in the coming years.