Seeds Bill 2025 Latest News
- The Centre has introduced a new Seeds Bill that mandates compulsory registration of all seed varieties and imposes stricter penalties for violations.Â
- Released by the Ministry of Agriculture and Farmers Welfare recently, the draft legislation aims to modernise and strengthen seed regulation in India, and will replace the existing Seeds Act, 1966 once enacted.
Why India Needs a New Seeds Bill
- The current Seeds Act regulates only notified seed varieties, and registration is not mandatory.Â
- Several categories — including green manure seeds, commercial crops, and plantation crops — fall outside its scope.Â
- Penalties are outdated and minimal, limited to six months’ imprisonment and a ₹1,000 fine.
- These regulatory gaps have driven longstanding demand for an updated law.Â
- An earlier attempt in 2004, when a new Seeds Bill was introduced and sent to a Parliamentary committee, did not progress into legislation.
Problem of Spurious and Substandard Seeds in India
- Complaints about low-quality and fake seeds are frequent, and the Agriculture Ministry has repeatedly highlighted the issue.Â
- Between 2022 and 2025, 43,001 seed samples were found non-standard out of nearly 6 lakh samples tested.
- West Bengal accounted for the highest share at 62%, followed by Tamil Nadu and Madhya Pradesh.
- During the same period, authorities also took extensive action: 12,287 warnings, 12,915 stop-sale orders, 1,914 FIRs/cases, and 164 forfeitures, underscoring the scale of the problem.
India’s Annual Seed Requirement and Market Size
- For 2024–25, India required 48.20 lakh tonnes of seeds, while 53.15 lakh tonnes were available, indicating adequate supply.Â
- The country’s seed market is worth around ₹40,000 crore.
- Between May 2014 and August 2025, 3,053 new seed varieties were released, with the public sector accounting for 85% of them and the private sector contributing 15%.
Key Features of the New Seeds Bill, 2025
- The Draft Seeds Bill, 2025 aims to overhaul India’s seed laws by replacing the Seeds Act, 1966 and Seeds Control Order, 1983.Â
- The government says it will improve seed quality, curb counterfeits, and protect farmers.
Mandatory Registration of Seed Varieties
- All seed varieties (except traditional farmers’ varieties and export-only seeds) must be registered.
- Varieties must undergo Value for Cultivation and Use (VCU) testing at multiple locations.
- Only seeds meeting minimum germination and purity standards can be sold.
Stronger Market Controls and Traceability
- Seed dealers must obtain a state registration certificate for selling, importing or exporting seeds.
- Each seed container must carry a QR code generated through the central Seed Traceability Portal.
Easier Compliance for Large Companies
- A new Central Accreditation System allows nationally accredited firms to operate across states without additional approvals — a move critics say benefits big agribusinesses.
Higher Penalties
- Minor offences attract fines starting at ₹1 lakh.
- Major offences, including selling spurious or unregistered seeds, carry penalties of up to ₹30 lakh and three years’ imprisonment.
Farmers’ Rights
- Farmers may grow, save, exchange, share and sell farm-saved seeds (but not under a brand name).
- New central and state seeds committees will oversee implementation.
Major Concerns Raised by Critics
- No Easy Compensation for Farmers - Crop failure due to faulty seeds still requires farmers to seek compensation through courts — an expensive, time-consuming process. Critics say the Bill lacks a farmer-friendly grievance mechanism.
- Community Seed Keepers Excluded - Collectives like FPOs, women’s seed groups, and traditional seed networks will be treated as commercial entities, subject to heavy compliance burdens. Experts warn this may open doors to biopiracy of India’s genetic resources.
- Corporate Bias and Digital Burden - VCU trials favour uniform hybrid seeds from big companies, making it harder for indigenous, diverse, climate-resilient varieties to qualify. Mandatory digital reporting, QR tracking and online submissions are difficult for small rural seed keepers with low digital access.
- Risk of Foreign Seed Entry - Foreign organisations may be recognised for VCU testing. Critics fear this could allow genetically modified or patented seeds into India without strong domestic evaluation. Some warn this could worsen farmer distress and lead to severe social consequences, including higher farmer suicides.
Seeds Bill 2025 FAQs
Q1: Why does India need a new Seeds Bill?
Ans: The old Seeds Act covers only notified varieties, excludes major crops, and has outdated penalties. Rising cases of fake seeds created urgency for stronger legislation.
Q2: How serious is the issue of substandard seeds in India?
Ans: Between 2022 and 2025, 43,001 seed samples failed quality tests. States issued thousands of warnings and FIRs, showing widespread concerns about seed quality and farmer losses.
Q3: What are the key features of the Seeds Bill 2025?
Ans: Mandatory registration, VCU testing, QR-based traceability, stricter penalties, accreditation for large firms, and explicit recognition of farmers’ rights to save and exchange seeds.
Q4: Why are farmer groups critical of the Bill?
Ans: They argue it favours big companies, burdens small seed keepers with digital compliance, excludes community seed networks, and lacks an easy compensation mechanism for crop losses.
Q5: What market context does the Bill address?
Ans: India requires over 48 lakh tonnes of seeds annually, with a ₹40,000-crore seed market and thousands of new varieties released—demanding stronger regulation and oversight.