The draft Seeds Bill, 2025, proposes a penalty of Rs 30 lakh and up to three years imprisonment for selling poor-quality seeds.
The Bill, released by the Ministry of Agriculture and Farmers Welfare, mandates the registration of seed varieties.
It aims to replace the Seeds Act of 1966.
The draft Bill categorizes offenses into trivial, minor, and major, with stringent penalties for major offenses like selling spurious or non-registered seeds.
Comments on the draft are invited until December 11.
Detailed Insights:
The Bill mandates registration of all seed varieties except farmers' varieties and those produced exclusively for export.
Existing varieties notified under the Seeds Act, 1966, will be considered registered under the new law.
Major offenses include supplying spurious seeds, non-registered seeds, and operating without registration as a dealer, distributor, producer, or plant nursery.
The Bill aims to regulate seed quality for sale and import, facilitating the production and supply of quality seeds.
Previous attempts to enact similar bills in 2004 and 2019 were unsuccessful.
Key Concepts Involved:
Spurious Seeds: Seeds that do not conform to prescribed standards, often of low quality or fake.
Seed Registration: Mandatory process of recording seed varieties to ensure quality control and traceability.
Seeds Act: Law governing the quality, production, and distribution of seeds.