PDS rice quality upgraded for 80 crore PMGKAY beneficiaries, broken grain cap cut
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
The Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs (CCEA) has approved the first revision of rice quality specifications under the Public Distribution System (PDS) in nearly three decades, ensuring that close to 80 crore beneficiaries of schemes including the Pradhan Mantri Garib Kalyan Anna Yojana (PMGKAY) receive rice with significantly lower broken grain content. The decision was announced by Prahlad Joshi, Union Minister of Consumer Affairs, Food and Public Distribution, on 2 July.
New Quality Specifications
Under the revised norms, raw rice supplied through PMGKAY and other welfare schemes will now contain a maximum of 10 per cent broken grains, down sharply from the earlier permissible limit of 25 per cent. For parboiled rice, the broken grain ceiling has been reduced from 16 per cent to just 5 per cent. Crucially, beneficiaries' existing entitlements remain unchanged — only the quality of the grain improves.
Rollout and Phased Transition
Procurement of the improved-quality rice will begin immediately, with full rollout across all procuring states targeted by the Kharif Marketing Season (KMS) 2027-28. Distribution under PMGKAY and allied welfare schemes will also follow a phased approach to ensure a smooth transition across all states. The proposal has already been validated through pilot programmes in Haryana, Andhra Pradesh, Punjab, Odisha, Telangana, and Chhattisgarh, which demonstrated the operational feasibility of producing improved-quality rice at scale.
Cost Rationalisation and Revenue Gains
The reform is expected to generate annual cost savings of ₹2,161 crore through reduced logistics, storage, and packaging expenses. Broken rice separated during milling will be auctioned directly from millers' premises, eliminating the need for additional transportation and storage. The shift will also reduce the requirement for jute bags, as broken rice will instead be stored in HDPE bags. Revenue from the sale of separated broken rice is expected to further ease the food subsidy burden on the exchequer.
Traceability and Anti-Leakage Measures
The reform also envisages QR-code tagging of rice bags to enable end-to-end traceability across the supply chain. This is intended to strengthen transparency, accountability, and inventory management within the PDS, effectively plugging potential leakages. This comes amid longstanding concerns about diversion of subsidised grain away from intended beneficiaries.
What This Means for Beneficiaries
According to the government, beneficiaries will receive rice with better grain integrity, improved appearance, and higher consumer acceptability — without any reduction in their allotted quantities. The revision marks a policy shift from merely ensuring food security in terms of volume to also addressing the quality of food grains reaching the country's most vulnerable households. Full nationwide implementation is expected to be in place by KMS 2027-28.