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Draft Seeds Bill, 2025

Kartavya Desk Staff

Source: PIB

Subject: Government Schemes

Context: The Government of India has released the Draft Seeds Bill, 2025 for public consultation to overhaul India’s seed regulation framework.

• It aims to replace the Seeds Act, 1966 and Seeds (Control) Order, 1983 with a modern, farmer-centric and innovation-driven system.

About Draft Seeds Bill, 2025:

What it is?

• A modern legislation to regulate seed quality, protect farmers, and build a transparent, traceable, and accountable seed ecosystem, including registration, certification, and QR-based digital tracking.

Background / Need:

• Existing laws (Seeds Act, 1966; Seeds Control Order, 1983) became outdated amid rising hybrids, GM traits, private R&D and global trade.

• Earlier reform attempts (like the 2004 Seeds Bill) stalled.

• The 2025 Draft Bill introduces digital traceability, farmers’ rights, graded penalties, and ease of doing business.

• Ensure high-quality seeds with clear germination, purity and health standards.

• Protect farmers from spurious, misbranded or sub-standard seeds.

• Strengthen transparency through a central Seed Traceability Portal and QR codes.

• Promote private R&D and reduce compliance burden with decriminalised minor offences

Key Features of the Draft Seeds Bill, 2025:

Mandatory Registration of Seed Varieties:

• No seed can be sold for sowing unless it is registered based on Value for Cultivation and Use (VCU) trials.

• Varieties notified under the 1966 Act are deemed registered, and existing cultivated varieties get provisional registration for 3 years.

• Registration may be suspended or revoked if performance is poor or safety concerns arise.

Farmers’ Rights Protected:

• Farmers retain the right to save, use, re-sow, exchange and sell farm-saved seeds except under a brand name.

• They are exempt from penalties for selling their own farm seeds.

Strong Quality Regulation & Standards:

• Central Government will notify minimum standards for germination, purity, traits, and seed health.

• Mandatory labelling + QR codes for traceability.

• Misbranded, spurious or sub-standard seeds prohibited.

Mandatory Registration Across the Seed Chain:

Seed producers, seed processing units, dealers, distributors, and plant nurseries must be registered with State Governments.

• A Central Accreditation System allows multi-state companies to be “deemed registered”.

Certification & Testing Ecosystem Strengthened:

• Creation and recognition of Seed Certification Agencies (state or accredited).

• Central & State Seed Testing Laboratories established with defined standards.

• Seed Inspectors and Analysts get clear powers for sampling, search, and seizure.

Liberalised but Regulated Seed Imports:

• Imports must comply with quarantine regulations and Indian Minimum Seed Certification Standards.

• Unregistered varieties may be imported for research and trials with approval.

Digital Seed Traceability (SATHI Portal):

• Mandatory onboarding of all producers, dealers, research bodies.

• Ensures end-to-end tracking, transparency, and minimisation of fraud.

Graded Penalty System (Decriminalisation + Strict Action)

Trivial offences: warnings + small penalties.

Minor offences: penalties up to ₹2 lakh.

Major offences: penalties up to ₹30 lakh, cancellation of registration, and even imprisonment in extreme cases.

• Farmers are exempt from penalties for selling farm-saved seeds.

Price Regulation in Emergencies:

• Central Government may fix prices during scarcity, monopolistic pricing, or profiteering situations.

AI-assisted content, editorially reviewed by Kartavya Desk Staff.

About Kartavya Desk Staff

Articles in our archive published before our editorial team was expanded. Legacy content is periodically reviewed and updated by our current editors.

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