Bhutan declared an ambition to become 100% organic by 2020 but achieved only around 1% certified farmland; the target has been revised to 2035, with the BOGS certification system providing a free pathway for small farmers.
When Bhutan declared in 2007 its intention to become the world's first entirely organic nation, the announcement attracted widespread international attention. The vision rested on a compelling logic: the majority of Bhutanese smallholders had never adopted synthetic pesticides or chemical fertilisers in the first place, meaning the transition to certified organic farming would, in theory, require verification rather than wholesale agricultural transformation. Two decades on, the gap between aspiration and reality has proved wide. Only a small fraction of cultivated land carries formal organic certification, and the target date has been pushed repeatedly — most recently to 2035 — as structural barriers resist straightforward policy solutions.
The 100% Organic Vision
The organic ambition was launched under the Ministry of Agriculture and reinforced at the Rio+20 Summit in 2012, where Bhutan's prime minister reaffirmed the commitment before a global audience. The vision drew directly from the Gross National Happiness philosophy: an economy that prioritises wellbeing, environmental integrity, and cultural continuity over growth measured purely in output. Organic agriculture fit neatly into GNH's ecological pillar and offered the additional appeal of premium international market access for Bhutanese products.
In practical terms, the ambition faced a definitional challenge from the outset. While it is broadly accurate that more than 80 per cent of Bhutanese farms operate without synthetic agro-chemicals — by tradition, necessity, and limited access to input markets rather than by deliberate choice — the absence of synthetic inputs does not automatically constitute organic production under internationally recognised standards. Certification requires documentation, traceability, soil testing, and compliance with structured protocols that many subsistence farmers are poorly positioned to navigate independently.
Bhutan Organic Guarantee System
To address the certification gap, Bhutan developed the Bhutan Organic Guarantee System (BOGS), administered by the Bhutan Food and Drug Authority (BFDA). The BOGS provides a free-of-charge certification pathway specifically designed for small and marginal farmers, making it accessible without the financial burden that third-party international certification (such as USDA Organic or EU Organic) imposes. The system is compliant with International Federation of Organic Agriculture Movements (IFOAM) standards and encompasses multiple conformity assessment options: the Local Organic Assurance System, Participatory Guarantee Systems (PGS), and third-party certification, all of which grant access to the Bhutan Organic Mark.
Participatory Guarantee Systems are particularly suited to Bhutan's dispersed smallholder landscape, as they rely on peer verification within farmer groups rather than expensive external auditors. A trained group of farmers verifies each other's practices against the BOGS standard, generating documentary evidence at low cost. Despite this streamlined approach, total certified area as of the most recent comprehensive survey stood at approximately 1 per cent of cultivated land — far below any trajectory consistent with a 2035 full-conversion target.
Challenges and Progress
Several structural barriers explain the slow pace of certification. Farm labour shortages — driven partly by rural-to-urban migration and emigration — reduce farmers' capacity to manage organic pest and disease pressures that would otherwise be suppressed by chemicals. Organic soil amendments and biological pest control products are not reliably available in rural markets. Post-harvest infrastructure for segregating, storing, and marketing certified organic produce at a premium is underdeveloped. And without consistent price premiums reaching farmers directly, the economic incentive to formalise existing practices through certification is limited.
The National Organic Symposium of 2019 acknowledged these realities by extending the deadline from 2020 to 2035. Subsequent capacity-building programmes — including a 2024–2025 initiative in Tsirang Dzongkhag aimed at strengthening certification systems — have continued to expand the pool of trained inspectors and the number of farmers enrolled in PGS groups. Two organic certification centres formally registered in recent years bring institutional infrastructure closer to the farm level, and the registration of additional certified clusters has gradually increased the total certified area, even if progress remains incremental.
References
- "Organic Agriculture in Bhutan: Dream of 100% Organic is Stalled at Reality of 1% Organic." European Journal of Development Studies / HAL Science, 2023.
- "Bhutan Organic Guarantee System (BOGS) Version 2019." Bhutan Food and Drug Authority.
- "Bhutan Steps Up Efforts to Meet 2035 Organic Farming Goal." BBS.
- "Bhutan's Challenges and Prospects for Becoming 100% Organic." Heinrich Böll Foundation, 2022.
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