The National Programme for Organic Production (NPOP) is India’s official framework for organic certification, especially for organic products meant for export. It is implemented by APEDA under the Ministry of Commerce and Industry.
NPOP lays down standards for organic production, accreditation of certification bodies, inspection, certification, labelling and traceability. Its main purpose is to ensure that products sold as “organic” are genuinely produced according to recognised organic standards.
Institutional Framework
The Agricultural and Processed Food Products Export Development Authority (APEDA) implements NPOP. APEDA functions under the Department of Commerce, Ministry of Commerce and Industry.
The programme covers:
- standards for organic production
- accreditation of certification bodies
- certification procedures
- inspection and audit system
- organic labelling
- traceability of certified products
- promotion of organic farming and marketing
APEDA describes NPOP as a programme involving accreditation of certification bodies, standards for organic production, promotion of organic farming and marketing.
Certification System
NPOP follows a third-party certification system.
This means farmers, farmer groups, processors, exporters or operators must get certified by an accredited certification body. The certification body inspects whether organic standards are being followed.
Certification usually checks:
- use of organic seeds or permitted planting material
- soil fertility management
- prohibition of synthetic fertilisers and pesticides
- pest and disease control through permitted inputs
- prevention of contamination
- harvest, storage and processing practices
- labelling and traceability records
This certification gives assurance to buyers that the product has been produced according to organic standards.
NPOP 8th Edition, 2024
The current updated framework is the 8th Edition of NPOP, 2024. APEDA’s NPOP portal lists the NPOP Regulation 8th Edition 2024 as the current regulation.
The updated framework is important because India’s organic export credibility depends on strong certification and traceability.
The 8th edition focuses on:
- stronger certification oversight
- improved traceability
- clearer procedures for operators and certification bodies
- technology-enabled monitoring
- better alignment with global organic trade requirements
This is important because organic exports depend on trust. If certification becomes weak, importing countries and buyers may reject Indian organic products.
Export and Market Significance
NPOP is especially important for India’s organic exports.
Certified organic products include:
- cereals
- pulses
- oilseeds
- tea
- coffee
- spices
- fruits and vegetables
- cotton
- processed foods
- medicinal plants
- wild-collected products
India has a large organic producer base. APEDA’s NPOP portal notes that India ranks 1st in the world in total number of organic producers and 2nd in organic agricultural land, based on FiBL and IFOAM Year Book 2025 data.
NPOP helps Indian organic products access premium global markets by providing formal certification and the India Organic identity.
NPOP and Domestic Organic Market
NPOP is mainly associated with export certification. For domestic organic food regulation, FSSAI’s Jaivik Bharat framework is also relevant.
In practice, organic products in India may be linked with certification systems such as:
- NPOP certification
- Participatory Guarantee System for India
- Jaivik Bharat logo for consumer identification
For UPSC, the key point is that NPOP is implemented by APEDA under the Ministry of Commerce and Industry, while FSSAI regulates food safety and labelling aspects of food products in the domestic market.
Key Concerns
The biggest concern under NPOP is certification credibility.
Organic certification can fail if inspections are weak, records are manipulated, prohibited chemicals are used, or traceability breaks down between farm, processor and exporter.
Organic cotton has been a major area of concern. Reports noted irregularities in organic cotton certification, leading to action against certification bodies, including suspension and termination of accreditation in some cases.
This shows that certification is not a formality. It is central to India’s export reputation.
Other concerns include:
- weak monitoring of certification bodies
- contamination during storage and processing
- difficulty in verifying small farmer group compliance
- high certification cost for small farmers
- post-production traceability gaps
- risk of ordinary produce being falsely labelled organic
Conclusion
The National Programme for Organic Production is India’s main organic certification framework for export-oriented organic products.
It is implemented by APEDA under the Ministry of Commerce and Industry and covers standards, accreditation, certification, inspection, labelling and traceability.
Its importance lies in giving Indian organic products credibility in global markets. The success of NPOP depends on strict certification, transparent traceability, strong action against irregularities and protection of India’s reputation as a reliable organic exporter.



