Union finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman on Friday said externally aided projects (EAPs) should not be seen merely as financing tools but as instruments to help local products from the Northeast access global markets, strengthen livelihoods and turn the regionโs geographical challenges into economic opportunities.Chairing a conference on โLeveraging externally aided projects in the northeastern statesโ, Sitharaman said assistance under EAPs in the Northeast has increased seven-fold under the Narendra Modi government.โThe scale of support to the Northeast had increased from around Rs 9,000 crore during 2004-2014 to nearly Rs 76,000 crore between 2014 and 2026,โ she said.Highlighting the regionโs connectivity push, the finance minister said more than 10,000 km of roads have been built in the Northeast since 2014 at a cost exceeding Rs 1 lakh crore, while another 5,000 km of highways are under construction.Sitharaman said farmers, artisans and young people in the Northeast have historically struggled to access markets, making infrastructure and connectivity critical to unlocking the regionโs economic potential.Describing the Northeast as โblessed as few places on earth areโ, she said the regionโs rich natural resources, cultural heritage and hardworking people deserved greater visibility and market access.She stressed that externally aided projects bring more than funding. They also introduce international best practices in project design, procurement, environmental safeguards and community participation.โWhen we speak of EAPs, we are not speaking of loans or project costs but of a development model that combines central support, state execution and global expertise, all for local communities,โ she said.The minister added that institutions such as the World Bank and the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) contribute innovative technologies and tested development models drawn from their experience in challenging geographies.Sitharaman also highlighted the Centreโs political focus on the region, noting that Prime Minister Narendra Modi has visited the Northeast more than 75 times since 2014, while Union ministers have made over 700 visits.โThe northeast is no longer seen as peripheral to India’s development story but regarded as central to India’s growth, connectivity and future prosperity,โ she said.However, she cautioned that implementation challenges remain and called for stronger project management, better last-mile connectivity, increased private sector participation and improved coordination among agencies.
Organic spice unit showcases local-to-global vision
Earlier in the day, Sitharaman inaugurated Northeast Indiaโs largest organic spice processing facility in Meghalayaโs Ri-Bhoi district.The organically certified unit, developed with an investment of around Rs 32 crore, can process more than 10,000 metric tonnes of spices annually, including ginger, turmeric, black pepper and chilli.The facility is expected to directly benefit around 5,500 organic farmers across Meghalaya and the wider Northeast region.Referring to her visit to the facility, Sitharaman said she witnessed the type of intervention needed across the region.โI saw the kind of intervention that the Northeast needs more of — local produce being processed locally, farmers getting better value and traditional strengths being connected to modern markets,โ she said.โCan there be anything better tailored than local products going global with external aid?โ she added.Meghalaya chief minister Conrad K Sangma described the facility as a โgame-changing initiativeโ and said targeted interventions over the past eight years have helped create sustainable income opportunities for thousands of farming families.The processing plant is the first organically certified spice processing unit in Northeast India and is certified under both the National Programme for Organic Production and EU Organic Standards, enabling access to premium domestic and international markets.