Union Minister Nitin Gadkari Urges Strong Rural Employment Push To Reduce Migration To Metro Cities
· Free Press Journal

New Delhi: Union Minister Nitin Gadkari on Wednesday said there is a need to create employment opportunities in rural and tribal areas to check migration to metro cities.
Visit bettingx.club for more information.
Addressing the second edition of Save the Earth Conclave, Gadkari further said economic condition of farmers and workers in villages is serious.
"Youth, farmers and workers from villages are migrating to Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, Bangalore and Pune due to lack of employment opportunities there. We should create employment opportunities in villages and tribal areas," he said.
— Nitin Gadkari (@nitin_gadkari) April 22, 2026
Addressed the 2nd Edition of 'Save the Earth Conclave' in Delhi today.
Emphasised the need for sustainable infrastructure, green mobility, and collective responsibility to tackle climate challenges, while driving innovation and policy reforms for a cleaner,… pic.twitter.com/jWJh009YGJ
The Road Transport and Highways Minister said youth and farmers are migrating from villages out of compulsion, highlighting 10,000 farmer suicides in Vidarbha region of Maharashtra.
He also called for a transformational shift in the agriculture sector to save farmers, saying they are 'annadata' (food producer), but they should now become 'urjaadata' (energy provider).
Bharat Electronics Secures ₹569 Crore Orders To Kickstart FY27 Order PipelineAlso Watch:
Gadkari also made a case for increasing production of alternative fuel and bio-fuel.
“We import fossil fuels worth Rs 22 lakh crore, which is also causing pollution... so we need to work on increasing production of alternative fuel and bio-fuel," he said.
The sugar price is determined by Brazil, the oil price by Malaysia, the corn price by the US, and the soybean price is influenced by Argentina."Our minimum support price (MSP) is higher than market price," he said.
The minister pointed out that bamboo plantation can create 5 crore jobs in India.
(Except for the headline, this article has not been edited by FPJ's editorial team and is auto-generated from an agency feed.)