I&B Ministry
Tribe and true India backs a global rise for indigenous enterprise
If India needed a sign that its tribal economy is ready to go from forest floors to global stores, the Tribal Business Conclave 2025 delivered it with a flourish. And at the centre of this surge stood union commerce minister Piyush Goyal, declaring that tribal enterprise is not just heritage, it is India’s next big export story.
Addressing a packed hall in New Delhi alongside union tribal affairs minister Jual Oram, Goyal said the Department of Commerce would throw its full weight behind all tribal products with export potential, with support flowing through e-commerce platforms, international warehouses for display and sales, and retail and wholesale trade networks. The announcement landed during Janjatiya Gaurav Varsh, commemorating the 150th birth anniversary of Birsa Munda, making the moment as symbolic as it was strategic.
Goyal revealed that a new scheme is under development to boost export promotion and visibility for tribal crafts, calling both domestic and international markets “immense opportunities waiting to be unlocked.” Quoting Birsa Munda’s iconic words “Our land, our kingdom” Goyal said India must honour that legacy by ensuring prosperity reaches every tribal household.
He noted that India cannot prosper unless its indigenous communities prosper, stressing that upliftment of tribal and remote regions remains a core national priority. Goyal lauded tribal communities for preserving values, art forms and craftsmanship despite decades of hardship, calling their contribution to India’s cultural identity “invaluable”.
Organised by DPIIT, under the Ministry of Commerce and Industry, in collaboration with the Ministry of Tribal Affairs and Ministry of Culture, the conclave attracted extraordinary scale:
● 250 plus tribal enterprises
● 150 exhibitors
● 100 plus tribal start-ups
● A buzzing Roots to Rise pitching platform
● 50 plus speakers across six panel discussions and four masterclasses
Industry bodies also stepped up FICCI as Industry Partner and PRAYOGI as Knowledge Partner placing tribal enterprise firmly at the heart of Viksit Bharat @2047.
Goyal highlighted transformative initiatives already reshaping tribal welfare:
● 3,900 Van Dhan Kendras uplifting 12 lakh tribal members
● 50 per cent budget increase for the Ministry of Tribal Affairs
● 50 lakh particularly vulnerable tribal families benefitting under PM-Janman Yojana, with Rs 24,000 crore disbursed
● 80 per cent fee reduction for GI applications from Rs 5,000 to Rs 1,000
“From Van Dhan to Vyapar Dhan,” Goyal said, must now be India’s rallying cry, urging all stakeholders to help tribal products take their rightful place on global platforms.
The conclave rolled out several marquee announcements:
1. Launch of the GYAN Lab
The Gramya Yuva Arth Niti Lab, developed by IIT Bombay’s Ashank Desai School of Public Policy and PRAYOGI Foundation, is designed as a public-policy innovation playground for tribal and rural enterprise models.
It will pilot:
● a Tribal Entrepreneurship Index
● micro-equity incubation models
● real-time digital and policy interventions
The lab marks a rare triad of academia, industry and government working in lockstep.
2. Tribal Affairs Grand Challenge
A joint initiative of the Ministry of Tribal Affairs, Startup India and DPIIT, inviting start-ups to build high-impact solutions backed by mentorship, visibility and funding opportunities.
3. Roots to Rise: Pitching Session Outcomes
After two screening rounds:
● 115 enterprises selected
● 43 with DPIIT registration
● 10 incubators offering support
● 57 enterprises drew investor interest from 50 plus investors, with commitments totalling over Rs 10 crore
● 33 enterprises wooed major players such as IFCI Venture Capital Funds Ltd. and Arora Venture Partners
These start-ups have already created 1,500 direct jobs and 10,000 plus indirect jobs, impacting 20,000 tribal individuals.
4. Surge on the Government e-Marketplace
The conclave saw 60 plus GeM registrations and 50 plus enquiries for TBC products, signalling a strong appetite from institutional buyers.
5. GI Certificates to honour unique tribal crafts
Designations celebrated crafts including:
● Kannadippaya (Kerala)
● Apatani Textile (Arunachal Pradesh)
● Marthandam Honey (Tamil Nadu)
● Lepcha Tungbuk (Sikkim)
● Bodo Aronai (Assam)
● Ambaji White Marble (Gujarat)
● Bedu and Badri Cow Ghee (Uttarakhand)
Each recognition adds brand value, boosts market visibility and protects indigenous heritage.
The conclave also treated attendees to a cultural showcase with a thematic pavilion and performances under “Tribal Bharat @2047: Sustaining Culture, Scaling Commerce.”
This blend of tradition and trade set the tone for a future where culture isn’t just preserved, it powers enterprise.
By the time tribal entrepreneurs, investors and policy-makers wrapped up the day, the message was loud and clear: India’s tribal talent is not waiting for opportunity, it is ready for lift-off. With structural backing, financial support, global access and a cultural edge, the path from roots to rise is no longer aspirational; it is actionable.
As Goyal put it, this is the decade when “Local Goes Global” and India’s tribal communities won’t just be part of the journey, they will lead it.
I&B Ministry
I&B’s 2025 report card: Lights, camera, action — and Rs 4,334 crore
NEW DELHI: If 2025 was India’s year to make waves, the ministry of information and broadcasting (I&B) was its chief surfboard maker. Prime minister Narendra Modi’s call to “create in India, create for the world” wasn’t just ministerial hot air—it triggered a tsunami of creative dealmaking that swept from Melbourne to Madrid, generating Rs 4,334 crores in potential business discussions and putting Indian creators on every continent’s radar.
The centrepiece was Waves 2025, the World Audio Visual and Entertainment Summit, which drew over 90 countries, 10,000 delegates, and roughly 1 lakh punters through its doors. Modi himself dropped by to glad-hand young creators, describing the event as a “wave of culture, creativity and universal connectivity”—and for once, the hyperbole wasn’t entirely unwarranted.
The summit’s CreatoSphere platform, which sounds like something from a sci-fi novel but is actually a hub for film, VFX, animation, gaming, and digital media, launched the Create in India Challenges. Season one attracted over 1 lakh entries from more than 60 countries across 33 categories. Winners weren’t just handed certificates and sent packing—they performed at Melbourne, exhibited at Tokyo Game Show, and pitched at Toronto International Film Festival. I&B minister Ashwini Vaishnav handed out gongs to 150 creators, cementing the government’s commitment to nurturing what it calls the “creative economy.”
WaveX, the startup arm, proved equally industrious. It coaxed over 200 startups into its embrace, enabled 30 to pitch to Microsoft, Amazon, and Lumikai, and somehow got two of its charges—VYGR News and VIVA Technologies—onto Shark Tank India, where they presumably dodged the usual mauling. The initiative’s KalaaSetu and BhashaSetu challenges, focused on AI-driven video generation and real-time translation respectively, attracted over 100 startups and picked ten for collaboration with government media units.
Waves Bazaar, the “craft-to-commerce” global e-marketplace, went on a roadshow between August and December, hitting 12 international events across four continents and four domestic jamborees. The numbers are eye-watering: over 9,000 B2B meetings, 10 memoranda of understanding signed, three more proposed, and the launch of creative corridors with Japan, Korea, and Australia. The ministry claims Rs 4,334 crores in potential deals—potential being the operative word, though in India’s booming content market, optimism often precedes reality by only a few quarters.
On the bricks-and-mortar front, the Indian Institute of Creative Technology opened its temporary Mumbai campus in July with Rs 391.15 crores in budgetary support. The public-private partnership with Ficci and CII has enrolled over 100 students across 18 courses, incubated eight startups, and signed memoranda with Google, Meta, Nvidia, Microsoft, Apple, Adobe, and WPP—a who’s who of tech giants keen to tap India’s creative reserves. A permanent 10 acre campus at Film City, Goregaon, complete with an immersive AR/VR/XR studio, is in the works.
Elsewhere, the ministry set up a Live Events Development Cell to position India’s concert economy as a growth driver. A single-window clearance system is being built on the India Cine Hub platform to expedite permissions for fire, traffic, and municipal approvals—addressing the red-tape nightmares that have long plagued event organisers. Meanwhile, an inter-ministerial committee is tackling digital piracy, that perennial thorn in the creative economy’s side.
State broadcaster Doordarshan snagged the Election Commission’s media award for voter awareness during the 2024 Lok Sabha elections, presented by the president on National Voters’ Day. Community radio added 22 new stations, bringing the total to 551, with workshops and a national sammelan held during Waves to strengthen local broadcasting.
The 56th International Film Festival of India in Goa screened over 240 films from 81 countries, threw in the country’s first AI Film Festival, and staged a grand parade through Panaji that turned the event into a street-level celebration. The accompanying Waves Film Bazaar drew over 2,500 delegates from 40-plus countries and showcased 320 projects—making it one of South Asia’s largest film markets.
The Central Board of Film Certification modernised too, launching a multilingual certification module that allows multiple language versions under a single application, and mandating 50 per cent women’s participation on examining and revising committees. Digital signatures replaced wet ink, and certificates became downloadable—small victories in the fight against bureaucratic inertia.
India’s I&B ministry ended 2025 having turned content creation into something resembling an industrial policy. Whether Rs 4,334 crores in “potential” business materialises remains to be seen, but the ministry has built the infrastructure, corralled the startups, and put Indian creators on international stages. As Modi might say, the wave has been ridden. Now comes the hard part: keeping the momentum going when the cameras stop rolling.
I&B Ministry
Centre drafts OTT rules to boost access for hearing disabled
MUMBAI: The Centre has inched closer to making India’s streaming universe easier to watch, hear and enjoy for everyone. The Ministry of Information and Broadcasting has released draft guidelines that aim to standardise accessibility on OTT platforms, ensuring that viewers with hearing and visual impairments are no longer left out of the country’s digital entertainment boom.
Issued on 7 October and now open for public consultation, the draft rules arrive with constitutional and global backing. Minister of State for Information and Broadcasting L. Murugan told the Rajya Sabha that the framework draws from Article 14, the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities and the Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act, 2016. It also mirrors the Code of Ethics under the IT Rules, 2021.
At the heart of the proposal is a two-phase rollout of mandatory accessibility tools such as same-language closed captions and audio descriptions. The ministry said penalties and enforcement steps will be shaped after the consultation, but compliance will be tracked through progressive targets for OTT content libraries.
Parliament was also reminded that the broadcast sector has walked this path before. In 2019, the government notified accessibility standards for television programming, starting with Prasar Bharati and eventually extending them to private broadcasters.
With OTT viewership climbing across urban and small-town India, the draft rules attempt to bring streaming giants in step with a wider vision of inclusive media. The government hopes the move will help millions of Indians with disabilities press play without barriers.
I&B Ministry
News broadcasters push back as MIB’s landing page proposal may create turbulence
MUMBAI: India’s broadcast heavyweights have mounted a firm resistance to the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting’s proposed rule change on landing pages, arguing that the plan is legally shaky, technically confused and commercially stacked against the industry.
News18, NDTV, Times Now and other major networks have told the Ministry that the amendment deserves to be scrapped altogether. Their submissions note that the proposal attempts to revive a measurement method that the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India had already studied and rejected in 2018 for being unreliable. With the issue currently before the Supreme Court, broadcasters say any fresh intervention now breaches basic principles of administrative fairness.
At the heart of the dispute lies the belief that landing page viewership is somehow suspicious. Broadcasters counter this view, insisting that landing pages act as legitimate promotional real estate, no different from a newspaper jacket or a supermarket’s prime shelf. When a TV set turns on and a viewer decides either to stay or switch away, they argue that this choice represents genuine viewing behaviour, not inflated numbers.
Removing first impressions, they warn, would wipe out real audience actions and twist the ratings picture. TRAI had raised the same concern in 2018, concluding that genuine impressions would be wrongly filtered out.
Industry bodies have added their voice to the chorus. The All India Digital Cable Federation has urged the Ministry to leave current practice intact, while several regional and smaller broadcasters have filed similar objections. The opposition, they say, stretches far beyond a few big brands.
With the sector unified in its stance, broadcasters have urged the Ministry to withdraw the proposal and preserve the current ratings framework. Only then, they argue, can India’s TV market retain a fair contest, clear metrics and a true reflection of what viewers actually choose to watch.
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