Draft Seeds Bill 2025 | Sowing change
Over two decades in the making, a proposed seeds law tightens regulation, but forces a trade-off between sectoral formalisation and farmers' autonomy

In March last year, 65-year-old Kacchalapu Satyam’s life unravelled soon after he took up a contract to produce maize seeds. His crop, sown over 10 acres in Chirutapalli village of Telangana’s Mulugu district, failed. His wife, Rajamma, suffered paralysis, reportedly due to food poisoning from discarded maize tassels. His 40-year-old son, Chandra Rao, weighed down by debt, died by suicide. They were not alone. Across 1,500 acres in Telangana, 671 small tribal farmers reported similar crop failures after planting maize seeds that promised yields of four tonnes per acre but delivered barely one.

