Few countries have specific targets about converting to organic farming, and when they have, it’s often failed – Sri Lanka dropped its national organic policy within months in 2021, and only three weeks ago, France scrapped its relatively conservative ambition for 15% of farmland.
Bhutan may be small, but on this issue it’s a global outlier. Motivated by its policy to measure development in Gross National Happiness rather than GDP, the South Asian nation has been slowly working towards becoming 100% organic since 2012 – and now has a target date of 2035.
Bertie spoke to Dr Sonam Tashi, an organic agriculture expert and Dean of Research & Industrial Linkages at the College of Natural Resources, Royal University of Bhutan, to hear about how Bhutan’s organic transition is going.
Further reading:
- ‘Bhutan’s challenges and prospects in becoming a 100% organic country‘, Heinrich-Boell-Stiftung Asia Global Dialogue, 2022
- Case Studies of Successful Farmers, Agri-enterprises and Farmers’ Groups and Cooperatives in Bhutan, 2022
- ‘Farmers’ perception on transitioning to organic agriculture (OA) in Tsirang district, Bhutan‘, Research Journal of Agriculture and Forestry Sciences, 2022
- ‘Bridging the Gap between the Sustainable Development Goals and Happiness Metrics‘, International Journal of Community Well-Being, 2019
- ‘Gross national happiness in Bhutan: the big idea from a tiny state that could change the world‘, The Guardian, 2012