Dr. Jitendra Singh visits NECTAR's Mobile Food Processing Unit in Shillong
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Union Science and Technology Minister Dr. Jitendra Singh on Tuesday, 14 July 2026 walked through the Mobile Food Processing Unit at the North East Centre for Technology Application and Reach (NECTAR) in Shillong, Meghalaya, interacting directly with beneficiary farmers and senior officials including Director General Dr. Arun Kumar Sarma.
Context
The minister's visit centred on a hands-on inspection of NECTAR's portable food processing infrastructure, which brings processing equipment directly to farming communities across the North Eastern Region. Dr. Jitendra Singh described the initiative as 'empowering farmers through value addition, improved processing, and technology-driven interventions' for organic fruit and vegetable based food recipes 'with market potential.'
NECTAR, headquartered in Shillong, is an autonomous body under the Department of Science and Technology (DST). The minister holds independent charge of both the Science and Technology and Earth Sciences portfolios, giving him direct oversight of NECTAR's mandate and funding.
Policy backdrop
NECTAR was established in 2014 by the Department of Science and Technology specifically to adapt and deploy technologies suited to the conditions of the eight North Eastern states. Its remit covers everything from water resource management to agricultural processing — with the Mobile Food Processing Unit representing one of its flagship field-level interventions.
The initiative addresses a persistent challenge in the region: significant post-harvest losses among smallholder farmers who grow organic produce but lack access to processing infrastructure and reliable market linkages. By making the unit mobile, NECTAR removes the need for farmers to transport perishable goods to distant facilities, reducing spoilage and improving income at the farm gate.
Stakeholders and impact
The primary beneficiaries are North East farmers and organic producers who grow a diverse range of fruits and vegetables suited to the region's agro-climatic conditions. Value addition through processing — converting raw produce into packaged food products — can meaningfully raise farmgate prices and open formal retail and export channels.
The visit also signals continued central government attention to the North East as a zone of science-driven rural development. Under Dr. Jitendra Singh's tenure, DST autonomous institutions have been directed to prioritise last-mile technology delivery, and NECTAR's mobile model is increasingly cited as a replicable template for other agro-processing challenges in hilly and remote terrain.
What's next
Policymakers and agriculture stakeholders will watch whether the government scales up the number of mobile units deployed across the region, and whether NECTAR's model is integrated with the PM Formalisation of Micro Food Processing Enterprises (PM FME) scheme, which provides capital and market support to small food processors. A broader rollout could extend the unit's reach to more farming clusters across Meghalaya, Assam, Manipur, Nagaland and other North Eastern states.
Dr. Jitendra Singh's field visit, combined with his direct engagement with beneficiary farmers, suggests the government intends to keep technology-led agricultural transformation in the North East firmly on its policy agenda in the months ahead.