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Government of Ministry of MSME

Brief Industrial Profile of District

Carried out by:-

MSME-Development Institute, (Ministry of MSME, Govt. of India,)

Phone: 0184-2230882 Fax: 0184-2231862 E-mail: [email protected] Web: www.msmedikarnal.gov.in

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Contents

S. No. Topic Page No. 1. General Characteristics of the District 3 1.1 Location & Geographical Area 3 1.2 Topography 4 1.3 Availability of Minerals. 4 1.4 Forest 4 1.5 Administrative set up 5-6 2. District at a glance 7-8 2.1 Existing Status of Industrial Area in the District Jind 9 3. Industrial Scenario Of Jind 9 3.1 Industry at a Glance 9 3.2 Year Wise Trend Of Units Registered 10 3.3 Details Of Existing Micro & Small Enterprises & Artisan Units 10 In The District 3.4 Large Scale Industries / Public Sector undertakings 11 3.5 Major Exportable Item 11 3.6 Growth Trend 11 3.7 Vendorisation / Ancillarisation of the Industry 11 3.8 Medium Scale Enterprises 11 3.8.1 List of the units in Jind & near by Area 11 3.8.2 Major Exportable Item 11 3.9 Service Enterprises 11 3.9.1 Coaching Industry 12 3.9.2 Potentials areas for service industry 12 3.10 Potential for new MSMEs 12 4. Existing Clusters of Micro & Small Enterprise 12 4.1 Detail Of Major Clusters 12 4.1.1 Manufacturing Sector 12 4.1.2 Service Sector 4.2 Details of Identified cluster 4.2.1 Welding Electrodes 4.2.2 Stone cluster 4.2.3 Chemical cluster 4.2.4 Fabrication and General Engg Cluster 14 5. General issues raised by industry association during the 12 course of meeting 6 Steps to set up MSMEs 13

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Brief Industrial Profile of

1. General Characteristics of the District:

Jind town is the district headquarters. It is one of the oldest districts of . It is one of the first Sikh Kingdoms. It lies in central Haryana and is the fourth district of the Jat belt (i.e , , Hissar, Jind).The city is clean. Rani Talab is the major tourist attraction and Pandu-Pidara and are the main devotional places attracting devotees for Amaavas bath.

Jind town has an Arjun stadium, milk plant; cattle feed plant, Bulbul restaurant and a large grain market. There are facilities for stay at PWD rest house, canal rest house and market committee rest house. The town is well provided with schools, colleges, hospitals and other basic amenities. Jind is noted for its numerous temples sacred to the worship of Shiva. Tradition assigns the settlement of the town to the Mahabharat period.

1.1 Location & Geographical Area.

Jind City is situated about 125 km. from Delhi, the capital of India. The area of the Jind district is 3,606 square kilometers. The city is on the Delhi-Ferozpur rail route. It is situated in the middle of Haryana The district lies in the North of Haryana between 29.03’ and 29.51’ North latitude & 75.53’ and 76.47’ East longitude. On its East and North-East lie the districts of , Karnal and respectively. Its boundary line on the North forms the inter-state Haryana- Punjab border with Patiala and Sangurar districts of Punjab. In the West and South-West it has a common boundary with district & Fatehabad and in its South and South-East lies the district of Rohtak and Sonipat respectively.

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1.2 Topography:

1.3 Availability of Minerals: The State of Haryana produces 130155 metric tones of minerals. However, in the District Jind availability of Minerals in terms of production is NIL. As per the Order of Hon’ble Punjab & Haryana High Courts, minining in Haryana particularly in Jind district is banned from 2010 to till date. 1.4 FOREST:

Reserved Forest Protected forest Un-classified Forest (Hect.) (Hect.) (Hect.) 419.25 6258.49 161.42

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1.5 Administrative set up.

From Administrative point of view District Jind is divided into Four Tehsils and Three Sub-Tehsils.

1. Jind 2. 3. Safiodn 4. Julana 5. 6. Pillukhera 7.

These Tehsils have been further divided into 6 blocks as under;

6 (Jind, Julana, Narwana, Uchana, No. of Blocks , Pillukhera) No. of villages 307 No. of inhabited 303 No.of un-inhabited 4 No.of M.Councils 2

No.of M.Committee 3

Administrative set up Deputy Commissioner

The Deputy Commissioner is overall in-charge of the general administration in the district. He is under the administrative control of Commissioner, , Rohtak. In fact, the state government authorities descend through the Divisional Commissioner to the Deputy Commissioner. The Deputy Commissioner has to perform triple functions, as he is at once the Deputy Commissioner, the District Magistrate and the Collector.

As Deputy Commissioner, he is the executive head of the district with multifarious responsibilities. There is hardly any aspect of district administration with which he is not concerned in one way or the other. He has a special role to play in the Panchayati Raj. In addition to keeping an eye on the working of Panchayti Raj institutions, he guides the Panchayats , Panchayat Samitis, municipalities, market committies and improvement trusts and helps them to overcome difficulties and problems.

As District Magistrate, he is responsible for the maintenance of law and order in the district. He is the principal executive magistrate for the enforcement of the security measures and exercises judicial powers under certain sections of the preventive chapters of the code of criminal procedure. Two Sub-Divisional Officers (civil) and Tehsildars and Naib-Tehsildars assist him in the work. The Superintendent of police who heads the police force in the district assists the District Magistrate to maintain law and order.

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As Collector, he is the chief officer of the revenue administration in the district and is responsible for collection of revenue and all dues recoverable as arrears of land revenue. He is the highest revenue judicial authority in the district. The Sub-Divisional Officers , Tehsildars, Naib-Tehsildars, Kanungos and Patwaris assist him in the revenue work.

Sub-Divisional Officer ( Civil)

The Sub-Divisional Officer is the chief civil officer of the sub-division. In fact, he is a miniature Deputy Commissioner of the sub-division. He is competent to correspond direct with the government and other departments on routine matters. He has to perform executive, magisterial and revenue duties. His executive duties pertain to the maintenance of law and order, development, local bodies, motor taxation, passport, issue and renewal of arms licenses, Sub-divisional establishment, etc. As Sub-Divisional Magistrate, he enforces security measures for the maintenance of Law and Order and exercises judicial powers under certain sections of the preventive chapters of the code of Criminal Procedure. An appeal from the orders of the Sub-Divisional Magistrate in such cases lies with the District and Sessions Judge. In the revenue matters he is Assistant collector Grade I. but under certain Acts, the powers of collector have been delegated to him.

Tehsildar / Naib-Tehsildar

The Tehsildar and Naib-Tehsildar are the key officers in the revenue administration and exercise powers of the Assistant Collector Grade II While deciding partition cases, the Tehsildar assumes powers of Assistant Collector Grade I. The Tehsildar and Naib- Tehsildar perform the functions of Sub-Registrar There main task being revenue collection and supervision, the Tehsildar and the Naib-Tehsildar have to tour extensively in their areas. They are principally responsible for the duties, they assist the development staff in their various activities in the execution of development staff in their various activities in the execution of the development plans, construction of roads, drains, embankments, soil conservation and reclamation, pavement of streets, filling of depressions and work connected with rural reconstruction.

Police

The police administration in the district is under the Superintendent of police, who, next to the Deputy Commissioner is responsible for the maintenance of law and order. He is assisted by Deputy Superintendent . The Superintendent of police functions under the administrative control of the Inspector General of Police, Hisar Range, Hisar.

Judiciary

The organization of civil and criminal justice in the district is headed by the District and Sessions Judge. The District & Session Judge is assisted by 5 Additional District & Session Judges. One Senior Sub-Judge ,1 Chief Judicial Magistrate ,2 Additional Senior Sub Judges and 5 Sub Judges help the District and Sessions Judge in the administration of civil and criminal justice in the district.

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2. District at a glance

S.No Particular Year Unit Statistics 1 Geographical features (A) Geographical Data i) Latitude 29°03’ and 29°51’ ii) Longitude 75°53’ and 76°47’ iii) Geographical Area Hectares (B) Administrative Units i) Sub divisions No 03 ii) Tehsils No 04 iii) Sub-Tehsil No 03 iv) Patwar Circle No -- v) Panchayat Simitis No 7 vi)Nagar nigam(M.C) No 5 vii) Nagar Palika No viii) Gram Panchayats No 300 xi) Revenue villages No 273 x) Assembly Area No 05 2. Population (A) Sex-wise i) Male 2011 No 712254 ii) Female 2011 No 619788 (B) Rural Population 2011 No 1028119 3. Agriculture A. Land utilization i) Total Area 2010-11 Hectare 278000 ii) Forest cover 2010-11 “ 1000 iii) Non Agriculture Land 2010-11 “ 40000 v) cultivable Barren land 2010-11 “ 4. Forest (i) Forest 2010-11 Hect 6839.16

5. Livestock & Poultry A. Cattle i) Cows 2007 Nos. 120926 ii) Buffaloes 2007 Nos. 501938 B. Other livestock i) Goats 2007 Nos. 9924 ii) Pigs 2007 Nos. 15545 iii) Dogs & Bitches 2007 Nos. 832 iv) Railways i) Length of rail line 2010-11 Kms

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V) Roads (a) National Highway 2010-11 Kms 124 (b) State Highway 2010-11 Kms 995 (c) Main District Highway 2010-11 Kms (d) Other district & Rural Roads 2010-11 Kms (e) Rural road/ Agriculture 2010-11 Kms Marketing Board Roads (f) Kachacha Road 2010-11 Kms 16 (VI) Communication (a) Telephone connection 2010-11 Nos 35212 (b) Post offices 2010-11 Nos. 96 (c) Telephone center 2010-11 Nos. 04 (d )Density of Telephone 2010-11 Nos./1000 33 person (e) Density of Telephone 2010-11 No. per KM. 21 (f) PCO Rural 2010-11 No. 321 (g) PCO STD 2010-11 No. 504 (h) Mobile 2010-11 No. 4,12,231 (VII) Public Health (a) Allopathic Hospital 2010-11 No. 03 (b) Beds in Allopathic No. 496 hospitals (c) Ayurvedic Hospital No. 27 (d) Beds in Ayurvedic No. 54 hospitals (e) Unani hospitals No. NIL (f) Community health No. 06 centers (g) Primary health centers No. 27 (h) Dispensaries (i) Sub Health Centers No. 09 (j) Private hospitals No. 158 No. (VIII) Banking commercial (a) Commercial Bank Nos. 81 (b) Rural Bank Nos. 05 Products (c) Co-Operative Nos. 33 bank products (d) PLDB Branches Nos. 5 (IX) Education (a) Primary school Nos. 500 (b) Middle schools Nos. 132 (c) Secondary & senior Nos. 388 secondary schools

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(d) Colleges Nos. 11 (e) Technical Nos. Nil University

2.1 Existing Status of Industrial Areas in the District Jind

S. Name of Land Land Prevailing No of No of No of No. of No. Ind. Area acquired developed Rate Per Plots allotted Vaca Units (In (In Sqm Plots nt in hectare) hectare) (In Rs.) Plots Produ ction 1 Industrial 10.12 10.12 1000 77 77 5 41 Estate, Jind

2 Industrial 43.71 43.71 1000 231 231 186 03 Estate, Narwana

3 Udyog 2.27 2.27 1000 86 39 47 26 Kunj, Shadipur, Jullana

Total 56.1 56.1 394 394 238 70

3. INDUSTRIAL SCENERIO

3.1 Industry at a Glance

Sr Head Unit Particulars No 1. REGISTERED INDUSTRIAL UNIT NO. 814 2. TOTAL INDUSTRIAL UNIT NO. 1156 3. REGISTERED MEDIUM & NO. 07 LARGE UNIT 4. ESTIMATED AVG. NO. OF NO. 07 DAILY WORKER EMPLOYED IN SMALL SCALE INDUSTRIES 5. EMPLOYMENT IN LARGE AND NO. 1542

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MEDIUM INDUSTRIES 6. NO. OF INDUSTRIAL AREA NO. 03 7. TURNOVER OF SMALL SCALE IN LACS 38143.98 IND. 8. TURNOVER OF MEDIUM & IN LACS LARGE SCALE INDUSTRIES

3.2 YEAR WISE TREND OF UNITS REGISTERED

YEAR NUMBER OF EMPLOYMENT INVESTMENT REGISTERED (Nos.) (lakh Rs.) UNITS 2006-07 16 96 128 2007-08 19 123 143 2008-09 15 105 135 2009-10 22 156 187 2010-11 14 108 126 Total 86 588 719

3.3 DETAILS OF EXISTING MICRO & SMALL ENTERPRISES AND ARTISAN UNITS IN THE DISTRICT

NIC TYPE OF NUMBER INVESTMENT EMPLOYMENT COD INDUSTRY OF UNITS (Lakh Rs.) (Nos.) E NO. 20 Agro based 288 3041 1718 22 Soda water -- - - 23 Cotton textile 04 60 28 24. Woolen, silk & artificial Thread - - - based clothes. 25. Jute & jute based - - - 26. Ready-made garments & 20 50 137 embroidery

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27. Wood/wooden based furniture 150 120 825 28. Paper & Paper products 5 15 34 29. Leather based 60 310 371 31. Chemical/Chemical based 10 55 64 30. Rubber, Plastic & petro based 4 24 21 32. Mineral based - - - 33. Metal based (Steel Fab.) 1 10 7 35. Engineering units 170 2550 1048 36. Electrical machinery and - - - transport equipment 97. Repairing & servicing 80 170 126 01. Others 20 180 129 Kachori Making 1 01 04

3.4 Large Scale Industries / Public Sector undertakings

List of the units in Jind & near by Area

1. M/s. Haryana Dairy Dev. Corp. Ltd. Jind 2. M/s. Hindustan Petroleum Corporation, Jind 3. Jind Co-operative Sugar Mill bLtd., Jind 4. M/s. India Gypsum Ltd., Jind

3.5 Major Exportable Items: Rice & Leather Chemicals

3.6 Growth Trend: Stable

3.7 Vendorisation / Ancillarisation of the Industry: Nil

3.8. Medium Scale Enterprises

3.8.1 List of the units in Jind & Near By Area:

i) M/s. Haryana Leather Chemical Ltd, Ind. Estate, Jind

ii) Lakshey Food (India) Ltd., Kaithal Road, Kandela

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3.8.2 Major Exportable Item: Rice & Leather Chemicals.

3.9 Service Enterprises

3.9.2 Potentials areas for service industry: - Auto workshops, TV & computer repair centre, Electrical appliances etc. have very good scope in servicing industry.

3.10 Potential for new MSMEs: Excellent (Both in manufacturing and Service Sector) particularly in the area of agro based unit.

4. Existing Clusters of Micro & Small Enterprise: Nil

(No cluster identified in the District Jind)

4.1 DETAIL OF MAJOR CLUSTERS: Nil

4.1.1 Manufacturing Sector: Nil

4.1.2 Service Sector: Nil

Present status of clusters: - (No cluster identified in the District Jind)

5. General issues raised by industry association during the course of meeting

a. Tough competition for marketing the product in the International market. b. Availability of finance to micro unit is not available and there are hurdles with the Bankers because of Policy of Bankers. c. Rate of interest is very high as compared to other countries. d. Non availability of infrastructural and industrial estates. e. Non availability of skilled labour and less power supply.

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6. STEPS TO SET UP MSMEs

Following are the brief description of different agencies for rendering assistance to the entrepreneurs.

S.No Type of assistance Name and address of agencies

1. Provisional Registration Certificate DIC, Jind ( EM-1) & Permanent Registration Certificate ( EM-II)

2. Identification of Project Profiles, techno- MSME-DI, Karnal, NSIC, economic and managerial consultancy services, market survey and economic survey reports.

3. Land and Industrial shed HSIIDC

4. Financial Assistance All Nationalised Banks, NSIC Ltd., HFC, KVIC & KVIB 5. For raw materials under Govt. Supply NSIC

6. Plant and machinery under hire / purchase NSIC basis.

7. Power/ Electricity DHBVNL

8. Technical Know –how. DIC, Jind & MSME-DI, Karnal, NSIC Ltd. 9. Quality & Standard Quality Marking Centre of Haryana

10. Marketing /Export Assistance NSIC Ltd. & MSME-DI, Karnal

11. Other Promotional Agencies --

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