EIMA Agrimach highlights the big challenges in front of Indian agriculture

EIMA Agrimach highlights the big challenges in front of Indian agriculture
Representatives of economic sectors intervened in the eighth edition of the international exhibition of agricultural machinery on the themes of sustainability, technological innovation and specialised skills

Bangalore: The eighth edition of EIMA Agrimach India, the international agricultural machinery exhibition organised by FICCI in collaboration with FederUnacoma (the federation of Italian agricultural machinery manufacturers) with the support of the Ministry of Agriculture and Farmers’ Welfare, Government of India and Indian Council for Agricultural Research (ICAR), opened on Thursday at the University of Agricultural Sciences, Bangalore (UAS-B).

The exhibition – which held its first five editions in New Delhi and from 2022 has been moved to Bangalore in Karnataka, to meet the technological needs of a region of the subcontinent whose agriculture is largely centred on fruit and vegetable production – will be on stage until Sunday 3 March with the display of models in the covered halls and demonstration trials in the outdoor areas of the exhibition centre. An important event of EIMA Agrimach was underlined by the solemnity of the inaugural ceremony that saw, in front of the large audience of the congress hall of the exhibition centre, the presence of the highest representatives of the organising bodies and the industries of the sector.

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In his greeting to the audience, the FICCI Karnataka State Council Chairman, Ullas Kamath recalled the vigorous economic growth of the Indian economy and underlined the significant improvements in India’s primary sector. The exhibition – this emerged from the speeches by representatives of FICCI Manish Singhal; of SBI, VN Sarma and of PWC, Guna Nand Shukla – confirms itself not only as a promotional and commercial event aimed at economic operators, farmers and agri-mechanics technicians, but also as an opportunity to analyse trends in agriculture and to highlight the great challenges facing the primary sector in India and in all major regions of the world. In this regard, the Italian consul in Bangalore Alfonso Tagliaferri underlined the importance of the commercial and technical partnership between Italy and India, especially in the field of agricultural mechanics and in that of high technology agricultural machines.

Mariateresa Maschio, President of FederUnacoma which has been an organising partner with FICCI of the Indian exhibition since the first edition in 2009, focused on the main topics of EIMA Agrimach 2024. “The issues that would be covered during the four-day event, which concern the sustainability of agricultural production, new technological and digital frontiers, training of technicians, but also the use of water resources, soil fertility and all the salient issues for the agricultural sector,” said Mariateresa Maschio. “These issues are of primary interest for India, but they are also of interest for agriculture globally. With its companies, its institutions, and its university and research system. India presents itself as an immense laboratory for a new model of agriculture, one that meets the needs of the present, and guarantees the right resources for the future,” concluded FederUnacoma’s president.

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