Protecting Regional Heritage | Empowering Local Producers | Boosting Agricultural Exports
Current Affairs Peg: Tezpur Litchi (Assam) achieves first export to Dubai, facilitated by APEDA (2025) |
GS Paper II & III | Also relevant: GS Paper I (Indian Society & Culture)
In a landmark development for agricultural exports from India’s North-Eastern region, Assam’s renowned GI-tagged Tezpur Litchi made its international debut with the first export consignment to Dubai in 2025. This milestone, facilitated by the Agricultural and Processed Food Products Export Development Authority (APEDA) under the Ministry of Commerce and Industry, is not merely a trade success story — it exemplifies the transformative potential of Geographical Indication (GI) Tags in elevating regional agricultural products to the global stage.
The development raises important questions for UPSC aspirants: What exactly is a GI Tag? Why does it matter economically, legally, and culturally? How does India’s GI framework align with international trade obligations? And most critically — what are the challenges and the way forward? This article provides a comprehensive analysis of all these dimensions.
A Geographical Indication (GI) is a form of Intellectual Property Right (IPR) that identifies a product as originating from a specific geographical location, and possessing qualities, reputation, or characteristics essentially attributable to that place of origin. Unlike a trademark — which distinguishes one producer from another — a GI protects a collective identity rooted in geography.
As per Section 2(1)(e) of the Geographical Indications of Goods (Registration and Protection) Act, 1999, a Geographical Indication is an indication which identifies goods as agricultural goods, natural goods or manufactured goods as originating, or manufactured in the territory of a country, or a region or locality in that territory, where a given quality, reputation or other characteristic of such goods is essentially attributable to its geographical origin.
KEY FACT for PRELIMS
Full Form: GI = Geographical Indication
Nature: Intellectual Property Right (IPR)
Governed by: GI Goods (Registration & Protection) Act, 1999
Authority: Geographical Indications Registry, Chennai
Ministry: Ministry of Commerce and Industry
Department: DPIIT (Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade)
India’s first GI tag: Darjeeling Tea (2004)
India has the highest number of GI applications in Asia as of 2024.
The GI framework in India is grounded in India’s obligations under international trade law, specifically the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS), which came into force as part of the WTO agreements in 1995.
The Lisbon Agreement for the Protection of Appellations of Origin and their International Registration (1958), administered by WIPO, provides an international registration system for GIs. India is not a member of the Lisbon Agreement but is party to TRIPS, which offers a broader multilateral framework.
India has consistently advocated for extension of the enhanced protection available to wines and spirits (under TRIPS Article 23) to all products, particularly agricultural goods, in the Doha Development Round. This position is significant because such extension would provide stronger legal protection to Indian GI products like Basmati Rice and Darjeeling Tea in international markets.
MAINS ANGLE — GS Paper II (International Relations)
India’s stand in WTO on GI extension: Push to expand Article 23 protection to all goods.
EU-India GI Cooperation: The India-EU FTA negotiations include GI recognition as a key chapter.
Basmati Rice Dispute: India challenged the ‘Basmati’ brand registration in Europe by RiceTec (USA) — an important case study in GI protection at the international level.
India’s bilateral GI agreements: India has signed GI recognition agreements with countries including the UK, Switzerland, and within the EU framework.
India enacted domestic legislation to comply with its TRIPS obligations and provide comprehensive legal protection to GI products.
Under the Act, there are two categories of GI registrations:
The registration process for a GI tag in India follows a structured administrative and quasi-judicial procedure.
GI Registry is in Chennai (NOT in Delhi or any other city — a frequent source of error).
GI protection is NOT automatic — it requires formal registration under the Act.
A GI Tag can be renewed indefinitely (unlike a Patent which expires after 20 years).
The GI Journal is the official publication for GI notices in India.
India is home to one of the most diverse collections of GI-tagged products in the world, reflecting its rich ecological, cultural, and artisanal heritage.
The table below provides a representative selection of GI-tagged products across major categories:
| Product | State / Region | Category | Year of GI |
| Darjeeling Tea | West Bengal | Agricultural | 2004 |
| Tezpur Litchi | Assam | Horticultural | 2015 |
| Shahi Litchi | Bihar | Agricultural | 2018 |
| Kashmir Saffron | Jammu & Kashmir | Agricultural | 2020 |
| Nagpur Orange | Maharashtra | Agricultural | 2014 |
| Basmati Rice | North India (Punjab, Haryana, UP, etc.) | Agricultural | 2016 |
| Coorg Arabica Coffee | Karnataka | Agricultural | 2004 |
| Malabar Pepper | Kerala & Karnataka | Agricultural | 2011 |
| Mysore Silk | Karnataka | Textile | 2005 |
| Kancheepuram Silk | Tamil Nadu | Textile | 2005 |
| Banarasi Saree | Uttar Pradesh | Textile | 2009 |
| Pochampally Ikat | Telangana | Textile | 2004 |
| Kullu Shawl | Himachal Pradesh | Handicraft | 2004 |
| Bidriware | Karnataka | Handicraft | 2005 |
| Aranmula Kannadi | Kerala | Handicraft | 2004 |
| Kolhapuri Chappal | Maharashtra & Karnataka | Handicraft | 2019 |
| Mysore Agarbathi | Karnataka | Manufactured | 2005 |
| Tirupati Laddu | Andhra Pradesh | Foodstuff | 2009 |
| Alphonso Mango | Ratnagiri, Maharashtra | Agricultural | 2018 |
Note: The above is an illustrative selection. India has 600+ registered GI tags covering products across all states and Union Territories.
The export of Tezpur Litchi to Dubai in 2025 represents a watershed moment for agricultural GI products from India’s North-Eastern region. A detailed understanding of this case is essential for UPSC aspirants, especially for Mains answer writing with a current affairs dimension.
The Agricultural and Processed Food Products Export Development Authority (APEDA) played a pivotal role in facilitating the Dubai export. Understanding APEDA is important in its own right for UPSC preparation.
A nuanced understanding of how GI Tags compare with other IPRs is frequently tested in UPSC Prelims and helps structure Mains answers:
| Feature | GI Tag | Trademark | Patent |
| Who can own | Community / Group | Individual / Company | Individual / Company |
| Duration | 10 years (renewable) | 10 years (renewable) | 20 years (non-renewable) |
| Purpose | Protect regional identity | Identify commercial source | Protect inventions |
| Transferability | Cannot be transferred | Can be transferred / licensed | Can be transferred |
| Legal basis (India) | GI Goods Act, 1999 | Trade Marks Act, 1999 | Patents Act, 1970 |
| Example | Darjeeling Tea | Tata (brand name) | Drug molecule |
A GI Tag CANNOT be transferred, assigned, or licensed to a person outside the geographical region.
A Trademark CAN be transferred or licensed irrespective of geography.
A GI TAG protects COLLECTIVE identity — no individual or company can own it.
Misuse of a GI Tag is a criminal offence under the GI Goods Act — punishable with imprisonment up to 3 years and/or fine up to Rs. 2 lakh.
Despite India’s impressive GI portfolio, several structural and systemic challenges impede the full realisation of GI potential:
A significant proportion of producers of GI-tagged goods are unaware of the GI registration and its commercial benefits. This results in failure to register as ‘Authorised Users’ — the legal prerequisite for commercially exploiting the GI tag on products. Without authorised user status, producers cannot legally label their products with the GI tag.
The machinery for enforcement of GI rights remains inadequate, especially at the state and district levels. Counterfeit goods masquerading as GI-protected products continue to circulate, particularly in urban markets and tourist areas, eroding the value of the GI tag. The police and judiciary lack specialised training to handle GI infringement cases.
GI protection under India’s domestic law does not automatically extend to foreign countries. India must negotiate bilateral recognition agreements or pursue product-specific litigation in foreign jurisdictions to protect Indian GI tags abroad. The Basmati rice dispute and the ‘Darjeeling’ trademark controversy in Europe illustrate this challenge.
GI registration alone does not guarantee market access or price premiums. Without adequate backward linkages (post-harvest infrastructure, cold chains, standardised quality protocols) and forward linkages (market development, branding, export facilitation by agencies like APEDA), the commercial benefit to individual producers remains limited.
The registration process, while legislatively defined, has been subject to significant backlogs and delays in practice. Many deserving products remain unregistered for years, leaving their producers unprotected. Procedural complexity also discourages small producer associations from filing applications independently.
For certain GI products, the boundary between traditional artisanal production (which the GI system aims to protect) and mechanised production has been legally contested. Determining what constitutes ‘authentic’ production under a GI is often contentious and can lead to prolonged disputes within producer communities.
REVISION NOTES — All You Need to Know
GI Tag: An IPR protecting products with specific geographical origin and qualities linked to that geography.
Legal Basis in India: GI Goods (Registration and Protection) Act, 1999.
Authority: GI Registry, Chennai | Under DPIIT | Ministry of Commerce and Industry.
International Basis: TRIPS Agreement, WTO (Articles 22–24).
Registration Validity: 10 years, indefinitely renewable.
India’s 1st GI Tag: Darjeeling Tea (2004).
India has 600+ GI Tags as of 2024 — one of Asia’s largest.
GI vs Trademark: GI = collective identity, non-transferable. Trademark = individual/company, transferable.
GI vs Patent: GI renewable indefinitely; Patent expires after 20 years.
APEDA: Under Ministry of Commerce; facilitates GI-tagged agri product exports.
Tezpur Litchi: GI tagged product of Assam; first international export to Dubai (2025) via APEDA.
Key Challenges: Enforcement deficit, low producer awareness, limited international protection, weak value chains.
Way Forward: TRIPS extension, National GI Enforcement Authority, FTA GI chapters, e-commerce integration.
Q1. Which one of the following is the correct definition of a Geographical Indication as applicable in India?
(a) An indication given by the government to a product based on its nutritional quality
(b) An indication which identifies goods as originating from a territory where a given quality or reputation is linked to its geographical origin
(c) A certification given by an international body to products with unique taste and aroma
(d) An indication given by FSSAI to products meeting food safety standards
Answer: (b)
Explanation: Under Section 2(1)(e) of the GI Goods (Registration and Protection) Act, 1999, a GI identifies goods as originating from a specific territory where a quality, reputation or characteristic is essentially attributable to its geographical origin. Options (a), (c), and (d) describe unrelated certification systems.
Q2. Consider the following statements regarding Geographical Indication (GI) Tags in India:
(1) GI Tags are registered by the Patents Office in New Delhi.
(2) GI registration is valid for 10 years and can be renewed indefinitely.
(3) A GI Tag can be transferred or licensed to a producer outside the geographical region.
Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
(a) 1 and 3 only
(b) 2 only
(c) 1 and 2 only
(d) 2 and 3 only
Answer: (b)
Explanation: Statement 1 is WRONG — GI Tags are registered by the Geographical Indications Registry in Chennai, NOT in Delhi. Statement 2 is CORRECT — registration is valid for 10 years and renewable indefinitely. Statement 3 is WRONG — GI Tags, unlike trademarks, cannot be transferred or licensed outside the geographical region.
Q3. Which of the following bodies is responsible for the registration of Geographical Indication Tags in India?
(a) Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI)
(b) Agricultural and Processed Food Products Export Development Authority (APEDA)
(c) Geographical Indications Registry under DPIIT
(d) Quality Council of India (QCI) under the Ministry of Commerce
Answer: (c)
Explanation: The Geographical Indications Registry, based in Chennai, operates under the Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (DPIIT), Ministry of Commerce and Industry. FSSAI is a food safety regulator, APEDA is an export promotion body, and QCI deals with quality standards — none of them register GI Tags.
Q4. Which one of the following is NOT a GI-tagged product from Karnataka?
(a) Mysore Silk
(b) Bidriware
(c) Darjeeling Tea
(d) Mysore Agarbathi
Answer: (c)
Explanation: Darjeeling Tea is a GI-tagged product from Darjeeling district, West Bengal — India’s first GI tag (2004). Mysore Silk, Bidriware, and Mysore Agarbathi are all GI-tagged products from Karnataka.
Q5. With reference to the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS), which Articles specifically deal with Geographical Indications?
(a) Articles 15 to 18
(b) Articles 22 to 24
(c) Articles 27 to 34
(d) Articles 39 to 42
Answer: (b)
Explanation: TRIPS Articles 22–24 specifically deal with Geographical Indications. Article 22 provides general protection; Article 23 provides enhanced protection for wines and spirits (India advocates extending this to all products); Article 24 provides for international negotiations.
Q6. Consider the following pairs: (GI-tagged product — State).
How many of the above pairs are correctly matched?
(a) Only one
(b) Only two
(c) Only three
(d) All four
Answer: (c)
Explanation: Pair 2 is incorrect — Kashmir Saffron is a GI-tagged product from Jammu & Kashmir, NOT Himachal Pradesh. All other pairs are correctly matched: Tezpur Litchi (Assam), Tirupati Laddu (Andhra Pradesh), Pochampally Ikat (Telangana).
Q7. Which of the following statements about APEDA is INCORRECT?
(a) APEDA was established under the APEDA Act, 1985.
(b) APEDA functions under the Ministry of Commerce and Industry.
(c) APEDA is responsible for the registration of GI Tags in India.
(d) APEDA facilitates export of scheduled agricultural and processed food products.
Answer: (c)
Explanation: APEDA (Agricultural and Processed Food Products Export Development Authority) is an export promotion body — its mandate is to develop and promote exports of scheduled agricultural and processed food products. It does NOT register GI Tags. GI registration is done by the GI Registry, Chennai, under DPIIT.
Q8. The GI protection in India does NOT extend to which of the following?
(a) Agricultural goods
(b) Handmade crafts
(c) Software products developed in a specific state
(d) Natural goods
Answer: (c)
Explanation: The GI Goods (Registration and Protection) Act, 1999 covers agricultural goods, natural goods, and manufactured goods (including handicrafts, foodstuff, etc.). Software products developed in a specific state do not qualify for GI protection — software is protected by Copyright and Patent law, not GI law.
Q9. With reference to GI Tags, which of the following is NOT a benefit of GI registration for producers?
(a) Legal protection against imitation and counterfeiting
(b) Ability to transfer ownership of the GI to a multinational company
(c) Better market recognition and potential price premium
(d) Access to export promotion support from agencies like APEDA
Answer: (b)
Explanation: GI Tags cannot be transferred or assigned to any individual or entity outside the designated geographical region — including multinational companies. This is a fundamental distinction between GI Tags and Trademarks. All other options correctly represent benefits of GI registration.
Q10. India’s National Intellectual Property Rights Policy was launched in which year, and what was its key feature regarding GIs?
(a) 2014 — provided for compulsory licensing of all GI products
(b) 2016 — recognised the role of GIs in promoting cultural heritage and economic development
(c) 2018 — mandated automatic international GI protection under WTO
(d) 2020 — transferred GI administration to the Ministry of Agriculture
Answer: (b)
Explanation: India’s National IPR Policy was launched in 2016. It is India’s first dedicated IPR policy and explicitly recognises GIs as a tool for promoting India’s cultural heritage, traditional products, and economic development of rural communities. It did not provide for compulsory licensing of GI products or automatic international protection.
Q1. “Geographical Indications (GI) are a valuable instrument for rural economic development in India.” Critically examine this statement with suitable examples. [15 marks, UPSC CSE Mains 2021 (GS III — Economy)]
Q2. India’s stand on extending enhanced TRIPS protection (Article 23) to all GI products beyond wines and spirits has been a significant diplomatic priority in multilateral trade negotiations. Evaluate the merits of India’s position and the challenges it faces. [10 marks, UPSC CSE Mains 2019 (GS II — International Relations)]
Key Points to Cover:
Q3. How do Geographical Indication Tags contribute to the preservation of India’s intangible cultural heritage? Discuss with specific examples from handicraft traditions. [10 marks, UPSC CSE Mains 2022 (GS I — Culture)]
These practice questions cover different GS papers and test your ability to synthesise knowledge. Attempt these with a 7–8 minute writing constraint to simulate actual exam conditions.
Q1. The export of Tezpur Litchi to Dubai marks a turning point for agricultural produce from India’s North-Eastern states. Analyse the significance of this development in the context of India’s agricultural export policy and the role of GI Tags therein. [15 (Practice) marks]
Q2. Distinguish between Geographical Indication Tags and Trademarks as forms of Intellectual Property Rights. In what ways is the GI framework better suited to protect the interests of traditional producer communities in India? [10 (Practice) marks]
Key Points to Cover:
Q3. Despite having over 600 registered GI tags, India has not fully leveraged this resource for economic development and export promotion. Critically analyse the challenges and suggest a comprehensive policy framework to address them. [15 (Practice) marks]
Key Points to Cover:
Q4. The protection of Basmati rice under Geographical Indication norms has been a contentious issue in India’s trade diplomacy. Examine the issue, India’s claims, and the lessons for India’s GI policy. [10 (Practice) marks]
Key Points to Cover: