To begin with, the company has already invested about Rs 20 crore in INI Farms, involved in pomegranate plantations on over 1,000 acres across Maharashtra and Madhya Pradesh. The project involves doubling productivity and increasing the export content from 40 per cent of the total production now to over 70 per cent with the help of modern farming and post-harvest technologies. The idea is to create a pomegranate brand.
“There are huge opportunities in agriculture and health care. Nobody has positioned these sectors as an exciting opportunity when it comes to business, even though the margins are as high as 45-70 per cent. If two or three people start glamorising the industry over the next two-three years, we’ll be able to look at scale and brand building for such sectors,” he adds.
Screwvala is also looking at opportunities in rural health care, a sunshine industry that remains neglected. “That’s the opportunity. Chances are you are going to be the only guy in this business. It’s true there is a shortage of qualified doctors, but basic amenities in health care like pathology labs don’t need MBBS doctors,” he says.
The second part of his dream project, for which he has himself committed Rs 250 crore over the next five years, is even more ambitious. His foundation called Share has finalised a blueprint to “improve the livelihood and empower people” in seven villages of Maharashtra, covering a million people across eight talukas and five districts.
“Our idea is not to donate money but to help the villagers become independent enough to earn their livelihood. We want to have an exit strategy where we help them for the first two years by giving them enough push. Then, they take it over themselves,” he adds.
Screwvala is now looking to raise another Rs 250 crore from other donors. “If I could hold roadshows for UTV during its IPO, I think I can do it for a good cause as well. We need to have a corporate mindset in social responsibility kind of work,” he says.
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