The hybrid seed industry has seen subdued growth over the past five years

Prices have been reduced from Rs 930 for a 450-gram packet of cotton hybrid seeds five years ago to Rs 730 last year, leaving little differentiation between good and bad seeds.

Indian hybrid cotton seed producers feel work is cut out for any new government that comes to power. “The hybrid seed industry has seen subdued growth over the past five years largely in cotton, which contributes around 30 per cent to the hybrid seed market,” says G V Bhaskar Rao, chairman and managing director of Kaveri Seeds.

Speaking to Business Today, he attributes much of the problems to farmer distress on account of pink bollworm pest attack, low cotton prices and changing climate conditions. Rao says the hybrid cotton seed price control has proved to be a major disincentive as it hinders research for better seeds. Prices have been reduced from Rs 930 for a 450-gram packet of cotton hybrid seeds five years ago to Rs 730 last year, leaving little differentiation between good and bad seeds. Due to this price cap, the seed industry has seen lower price realisation, leading to revenue loss of close to 20 per cent for all companies. There was also a lower crop acreage than earlier. He is, therefore, not in favour of a price cap.

What about its benefit to farmers? Rao says seeds account for just 5 to 6 per cent of the total cost a farmer has to incur. While rising input costs is a problem farmers are dealing with, Rao points out three important factors: Rising cost of labour, climate changes and anomalies relating to MSP (minimum support price).

He believes that whoever comes to power must provide incentives to seed companies to invest in research for better seeds that improve productivity. He says there are over 500 companies in the seed industry of which the 20-odd big companies, account for 80 per cent of total seed production.

Courtesy: Business Today

Recent Posts

Eastman launches Naia Lyte for lightweight, high-performance fabrics

Eastman introduced Naia™ Lyte, a new cellulose acetate filament yarn, at the Intertextile Shanghai Apparel Fabrics Spring/Summer 2026 exhibition.

5 hours ago

Ecco, Spinnova develop shoe using leather by-product fibers

Ecco, Spinnova have introduced the Ecco BIOM 720 shoe. This product is unique as it uses leather by-products that are…

5 hours ago

Xefco deploys first waterless plasma dyeing system

Xefco has deployed its Ausora system, marking the first time a waterless plasma textile dyeing machine has been deployed at…

5 hours ago

trinamiX to use NIR technology for supply chain transparency

trinamiX is helping manufacturers, recyclers, sorters, and brands improve material identification through its mobile near-infrared spectroscopy technology.

1 day ago

Bezos Earth Fund to develop next-gen materials for fashion industry

The Bezos Earth Fund has announced an investment of $34 million to support the development of new materials for the…

1 day ago

STCH to launch Fabric GPT for innovative fabric development

STCH is working on a system called “fabric GPT.” This tool is trained on large amounts of data related to…

1 day ago