Bamanwas Kankar becomes Rajasthan’s First Fully Organic Village

Bamanwas Kankar Panchayat, located in Kotputli‑Behror district, has become Rajasthan’s first fully organic-certified panchayat and North-West India’s first fully organic village body.
The panchayat has achieved 100% organic certification under the National Programme for Organic Production (NPOP), marking a significant grassroots milestone in India’s shift towards chemical-free and sustainable agriculture.

Rajasthan Panchayat Organic Pledge – What It Means

  • Seven hamlets under Bamanwas Kankar Panchayat have formally committed to:
    • 100% organic farming
    • Eco-friendly animal husbandry
  • Complete elimination of:
    • Chemical fertilisers
    • Chemical pesticides
    • Synthetic agricultural and livestock inputs

This represents a village-level institutional commitment, not just individual farmer adoption.

Certification & Institutional Support

  • Certified by:COFED
    • Provided technical guidance, compliance support, data collection and market linkage
  • Certification Standard: NPOP
  • Implementing Authority of NPOP: APEDA under the Ministry of Commerce & Industry

Community-Driven Transition

  • The shift to organic farming was bottom-up, led by local residents and women farmers
  • Key drivers:
    • Soil degradation
    • Falling groundwater levels
    • Health risks from prolonged chemical use
  • Farmers collectively took an oath to avoid synthetic inputs

‘Farmer-Friendly’ Outcomes Observed

  • Environmental gains
    • Increase in beneficial insects
    • Improved soil microorganisms
    • Better soil health and moisture retention
  • Economic benefits
    • Reduced dependence on costly chemical inputs
    • Access to premium organic markets
  • Livestock benefits
    • Better animal health
    • Safer, higher-value organic dairy products

Key Features

  • Chemical-free farming: All crops grown without synthetic fertilisers or pesticides
  • Eco-friendly livestock management: Organic and animal-health-centric practices
  • Community-led model: Collective village decision, not a top-down mandate
  • Institutional backing: COFED + NPOP certification
  • Market linkage: Enables premium pricing and stable demand

Significance

  • Soil & water revival: Helps reverse soil degradation and groundwater stress
  • Farmer welfare: Lower input costs + higher income realisation
  • Public health: Reduced exposure to toxic agro-chemicals
  • Biodiversity conservation: Revival of insects and soil ecology
  • Replicable model: A scalable panchayat-level template for sustainable rural development

National Programme for Organic Production (NPOP)

  • Launched: 2001
  • Purpose:
    • Organic production standards
    • Accreditation of certification bodies
    • Promotion of organic farming & exports
  • Implementing Agency: APEDA
  • Importance: Enhances India’s credibility in the global organic market

Organic Farming

  • Definition: Farming system that avoids synthetic chemicals and relies on ecological processes, biodiversity and natural cycles
  • India’s Global Position
    • 2nd largest organic agricultural land globally
    • Largest number of organic producers (~2.3 million farmers)
    • ~4.5 million hectares under organic certification (2023-24)
  • State Leaders (Share of Organic Area):
    • Madhya Pradesh – 26%
    • Maharashtra – 22%
    • Gujarat – 15%
    • Rajasthan – 13%

Government Initiatives Supporting Organic Farming

  • National Project on Organic Farming (NPOF) – 2004
  • Participatory Guarantee System (PGS) – 2011 (low-cost certification)
  • Paramparagat Krishi Vikas Yojana (PKVY)
  • MOVCDNER – North-East focused organic value chains
  • Unified India Organic Logo (2024) – launched by FSSAI & APEDA

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