Department for Promotion of Industry and
Internal Trade has issued detailed operational guidelines for the
implementation of the ‘Bhavya’ scheme
Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal
Trade has released the detailed operational guidelines for the implementation
of the BHAVYA Scheme, a landmark Central Sector Scheme aimed at developing
investment-ready, world-class industrial parks across the country.
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BHAVYA was approved by
the Union Cabinet in March 2026 with a total outlay of ₹33,660 crore for
developing 100 plug-and-play industrial parks across the country.
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The newly released
guidelines provide the institutional, financial, governance, and
project-selection framework for implementation of the scheme by States and
implementing agencies.
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The scheme will be
implemented over a six-year period beginning 2026–27 and builds upon the
experience of industrial smart cities developed under the National Industrial
Corridor Development Programme (NICDP).
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The guidelines emphasise
plug-and-play infrastructure, multimodal connectivity, sustainability,
competitive federalism, and investment-ready industrial ecosystems.
Key Features of the BHAVYA Guidelines
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Plug-and-Play Industrial
Ecosystem:The scheme promotes a plug-and-play
industrial model by providing pre-approved land, ready infrastructure,
integrated utilities, and single-window clearances to reduce project gestation
periods and accelerate manufacturing activity.BHAVYA is a sector-agnostic
scheme open to manufacturing industries across sectors, with a focus on
supporting MSMEs, startups, large manufacturing units, logistics providers, and
global investors.The scheme is aligned with PM GatiShakti to ensure multimodal
connectivity, logistics efficiency, and seamless integration with transport
networks.
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Phased Rollout and
Selection Framework:The scheme will be
implemented over six years beginning FY 2026–27, with up to 50 industrial parks
proposed in the first phase.Projects will be selected through a Challenge Mode
competitive framework to promote competitive federalism and encourage
reform-oriented, investment-ready proposals from states.The first application
window will remain open from 1 June to 31 July 2026, while a second round from
1 August to 30 September 2026 will allow revised or previously unselected
proposals to reapply.
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Project proposals will be
evaluated on parameters such as multimodal connectivity, quality of Detailed Project
Reports (DPRs), institutional readiness, and sustainability standards.
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Land and Infrastructure
Framework:Industrial parks will generally range
between 100 and 1,000 acres, with the minimum land requirement relaxed to 25
acres for hilly and North-Eastern regions. Both Greenfield projects and
unallotted Brownfield industrial land are eligible under the scheme.
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scheme provides central assistance of up to ₹1 crore per acre for the
development of core infrastructure such as roads, underground utility corridors,
drainage systems, treatment plants, ICT infrastructure, factory sheds, testing
facilities, warehousing, worker housing, and social amenities.Up to 25% of the
total project cost may be provided for external connectivity infrastructure
linking industrial parks with highways, railways, ports, and logistics
networks.
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Governance and
Institutional Structure:The Department for
Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (DPIIT) is the nodal ministry, while
the National Industrial Corridor Development Corporation (NICDC) is the
implementing agency.Each selected project must establish a dedicated Special
Purpose Vehicle (SPV) under the Companies Act with planning, infrastructure
management, and single-window clearance powers, while allowing participation of
private developers through transparent public-private partnership models.