City
Epaper

Maha govt overhauls M Sand policy, imposing strict penalties for quality violations

By IANS | Updated: October 28, 2025 19:45 IST

Mumbai, Oct 28 The Maharashtra government on Tuesday released a government resolution overhauling M Sand (artificial sand) policy ...

Open in App

Mumbai, Oct 28 The Maharashtra government on Tuesday released a government resolution overhauling M Sand (artificial sand) policy by imposing strict penalties for quality violations.

The government also empowered District Collectors with ministry-level authority, and Revenue Minister Chandrashekhar Bawankule said that all M-Sand units must adhere to Bureau of Indian Standards (BSI) and IS Codes.

District Collector-led inspections detecting non-compliance will result in a six-month license suspension; repeat offences trigger permanent revocation.

Minister Bawankule stated, “We have introduced critical changes to incentivise local entrepreneurs while placing uncompromising emphasis on M-Sand quality. District Collectors now hold full implementation authority.”

The district unit cap rises from 50 to 100, with Collectors authorised to approve units and extend incentives based on geography and applications. Government concessions apply to the first 50 units per district, extendable to 100.

He said that government land auctions are limited to Maharashtra-registered institutions; existing mining lease holders are disqualified from prioritising new entrepreneurs. Units receive 5-10 acres and must operationalise within one year of approval.

The reforms promote M-Sand as a sustainable alternative to natural sand with decentralised, swift enforcement against inferior products, said Minister Bawankule.

Earlier, Minister Bawankule said the new sand policy focuses on regulating sand excavation, distribution, and transportation to curb illegal activities and ensure a sustainable supply. It includes e-auctions for sand clusters, promotion of M-Sand (artificial sand), and free sand (up to 5 brass) for rural housing beneficiaries under the Gharkul scheme.

He stated that in order to reduce reliance on river sand, the policy promotes M-Sand (manufactured sand), with 50 crusher units authorised per district and mandatory use in government projects (20 per cent initially, increasing to 100 per cent over three years). This indirectly impacts transportation by shifting focus to locally produced artificial sand, potentially reducing transport logistics.

--IANS

sj/dan

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalBangladesh lawmaker slams BNP govt for appointing party-linked figures to key posts

InternationalManohar Lal visits Bhutan's heritage sites, discusses infra cooperation

CricketIPL 2026: Why MS Dhoni Is Not Playing Today’s Chennai Super Kings vs Delhi Capitals Match? EXPLAINED

BusinessManohar Lal visits Bhutan's heritage sites, discusses infra cooperation

NationalNitish Kumar’s decision to move RS solely his decision: Bihar Minister ​

National Realted Stories

NationalManohar Lal visits Bhutan's heritage sites, discusses infra cooperation

NationalECI orders massive police reshuffle in Bengal ahead of polls​

NationalDelhi HC flags delays in parole cases, orders SOPs for timely compliance​

NationalBJP wants to impose RSS agenda to replace Constitution: Tejashwi Yadav ​

NationalBengal polls: BJP flags illegal appointment of contractual staff as sector officers ​