SYLLABUS

GS 3: ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT- Storage, Transport and Marketing of Agricultural Produce and Issues and Related Constraints; E-technology in the aid of farmers

Context: National Agriculture Market (e-NAM),  launched in April 2016 is a pan-India electronic trading platform integrating agricultural mandis into a unified digital market enabling seamless online trading transparent price discovery and wider market access for farmers and traders representing a major step toward achieving the vision of “One Nation One Market” in agricultural marketing.

Key Achievements of e-NAM

  • e-NAM has emerged as a major digital reform in agricultural marketing, strengthening market integration and improving transparency in trade across India.
    • Its achievements reflect both scale expansion and deeper structural transformation of agricultural markets.
  • A total of 1,656 mandis across 23 States and 4 Union Territories have been successfully integrated into the platform, indicating wide geographical coverage and increasing adoption of digital trading systems.
  • The platform has built a strong stakeholder ecosystem with more than 80 crore farmers, 2.73 lakh traders, and 4,724 Farmer Producer Organizations (FPOs) registered, showing large-scale participation of key actors in agricultural markets.
  • In terms of trade performance, e-NAM has enabled cumulative transactions of around 25 crore metric tonnes of agricultural produce valued at approximately ₹4.84 lakh crore (2016–2026), reflecting its growing role in national agricultural commerce.
  • The platform has also demonstrated strong growth momentum, with trade value rising significantly from ₹3.19 lakh crore in 2024 to ₹4.84 lakh crore in 2026, highlighting increasing trust and deeper market engagement among stakeholders.
  • Operational activity remains robust, with over 204.76 lakh metric tonnes of produce traded in recent periods, indicating sustained usage and expanding digital participation in mandis.
  • The e-NAM mobile application provides real-time price information for 247 agricultural commodities, enabling farmers to access market signals and improve price realisation.
  • Additionally, the government has supported infrastructure development by providing financial assistance of up to ₹75 lakh per mandi, strengthening digital and physical integration of mandis into the e-NAM ecosystem.

Objectives  of e-NAM:

  • To create a unified national market for agricultural commodities through digital integration of mandis
  • To ensure transparent price discovery through competitive online bidding
  • To enhance market access for farmers, FPOs, and traders beyond local mandis
  • To reduce intermediaries and transaction inefficiencies in agricultural trade
  • To promote digital payments and financial inclusion in agricultural marketing
  • To improve post-harvest value realization and reduce distress sales

Key Features e-NAM

  • Single-window service: It connects APMC mandis across India and develops a single unified national market for agricultural commodities; Commodity arrivals, quality assaying, bidding, payment, all on one platform;
  • Unique Lot ID tracking: Each lot tracked from gate entry to final sale via mobile
  • Live price dashboard: Real-time commodity prices, mandi arrivals, trade volumes, publicly accessible.
  • Inter-state trade facility: State Unified License enables traders to bid across State boundaries
  • The platform integrates multiple digital payment modes, including NEFT, RTGS, internet banking, and UPI, enabling it to adapt across states.
  • Unique lot ID tracking system ensuring transparency from arrival to sale
  • Multilingual mobile application enabling wider accessibility for farmers (12-language interface: Hindi, English, Gujarati, Marathi, Telugu, Bengali, Tamil, Odia and others).
  • A key advancement in the evolution of e-NAM was the introduction of the Platform of Platforms (PoP) on 14 July 2022, which integrates a wide range of services through a unified digital interface on the e-NAM mobile application.
    • It enables farmers and stakeholders to access services across the agricultural value chain, including logistics, warehousing, quality assurance, grading and packaging, agri-inputs, financial and insurance services, along with advisory support such as weather updates and crop forecasting.
  • The Electronic Negotiable Warehouse Receipt (e-NWR) system has been integrated with e-NAM to enable a more seamless and efficient agricultural.

Benefits of e-NAM

Challenges

  • Uneven digital infrastructure and internet connectivity in rural areas
  • Limited digital literacy among small and marginal farmers
  • Slow integration and adoption by some APMC mandis and states
  • Inadequate standardization of quality grading and assaying infrastructure
  • Resistance from traditional market intermediaries
  • Logistics bottlenecks in inter-state agricultural movement
  • Limited awareness about advanced features like PoP and e-NWR linkage

Way Forward

  • Strengthen rural digital and physical infrastructure by improving internet connectivity, standardizing grading facilities, and ensuring better APMC reforms across states for smoother e-NAM integration.
  • Promote digital literacy among farmers through targeted training and capacity-building programs so that small and marginal farmers can effectively participate in online agricultural markets.
  • Enhance collective participation and partnerships by empowering Farmer Producer Organisations (FPOs) and collaborating with private logistics and fintech companies to improve market access and backend support systems.
  • Improved coordination between states for seamless inter-state trade
  • Wider awareness of e-NWR-based trading and collateral financing
  • Integration of AI-based price forecasting and market intelligence tools

Conclusion

The National Agriculture Market (e-NAM) represents a structural shift in India’s agricultural marketing system by transitioning from fragmented mandi-based trade to a digitally integrated national marketplace. While challenges in adoption and infrastructure remain, its expanding ecosystem—linking markets, storage, finance, and logistics—positions it as a key instrument for achieving efficient, transparent, and farmer-centric agricultural transformation in India.

Source:
PIB
Research Gate

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