E-NAM
The National Agriculture Market (e-NAM) is a pan-India electronic trading portal that networks existing Agricultural Produce Market Committee (APMC) mandis to facilitate online bidding and trading of agricultural commodities, establishing a unified digital marketplace.[1] Launched on 14 April 2016 by Prime Minister Narendra Modi and fully funded by the central government, e-NAM seeks to integrate fragmented physical markets through a common platform managed by the Small Farmers' Agribusiness Consortium (SFAC).[2] The initiative promotes transparent price discovery, reduces intermediaries' influence, and enables farmers to access buyers nationwide via competitive e-auctions conducted at integrated mandis.[1] By June 2025, e-NAM had integrated 1,522 mandis across 27 states and union territories, registering over 1.79 crore farmers and 2.67 lakh traders, with trade volumes encompassing diverse commodities like grains, pulses, and spices.[3] Empirical analyses demonstrate its impact on market efficiency, including average price increases of 5.1% for paddy, 3.6% for groundnut, and 3.5% for maize in unified markets, alongside enhanced price integration for crops such as onions.[4][5] Recent expansions, including the addition of nine new commodities in October 2025, continue to broaden its scope for digital agri-trade.[6] Despite these advancements, e-NAM faces operational hurdles, including infrastructural gaps in rural mandis, limited digital literacy among smallholder farmers, and challenges in quality standardization, which have constrained widespread adoption and full realization of pan-India trading potential.[7] Some studies note uneven price benefits across regions and commodities, underscoring the need for improved assaying facilities and state-level reforms to harmonize regulations.[8]Historical Development
Inception and Pilot Phase
The e-NAM scheme originated from government efforts to address the fragmentation of India's agricultural markets, characterized by over 7,000 regulated mandis under state-specific APMC laws that hindered interstate trade and efficient price discovery.[9] The Union Cabinet approved the scheme on July 1, 2015, with an initial outlay to fund the integration of physical mandis into a centralized electronic platform managed by the Small Farmers Agribusiness Consortium (SFAC).[10] The pilot phase commenced on April 14, 2016, when Prime Minister Narendra Modi inaugurated the platform, linking 21 mandis across eight states including Gujarat, Maharashtra, and Rajasthan.[11] This initial rollout supported e-trading for 24 specified commodities, such as paddy, wheat, and groundnut, through a web-based portal that enabled farmers and buyers to participate remotely while physical delivery occurred at local mandis.[12] Early implementation focused on technical integration, including quality assaying infrastructure at pilot sites and training for over 1,000 stakeholders to ensure compliance with unified trading rules.[13] By October 6, 2016, the first expansion phase had onboarded 250 additional mandis, marking a rapid scaling from the pilot to broader coverage while resolving initial challenges like digital literacy and connectivity in rural areas.[9] The pilot demonstrated potential for reducing transaction costs by 10-15% through competitive bidding, though adoption varied due to state-level regulatory differences.[14]Nationwide Expansion and Key Milestones
The Electronic National Agriculture Market (e-NAM) began as a pilot project launched on April 14, 2016, integrating 21 agricultural produce market committees (APMCs) across eight states, with a target to expand to 400 mandis in the fiscal year 2016-17.[15][1] This initial phase focused on establishing digital infrastructure for unified trading, funded entirely by the central government and implemented through the Small Farmers' Agribusiness Consortium (SFAC). Subsequent targets included an additional 185 mandis in 2017-18, aiming for a total of 585 regulated wholesale markets networked via the platform.[1] Expansion accelerated in subsequent years, reaching 1,000 integrated mandis across 21 states and union territories by early 2021, comprising Phase I (585 mandis) and Phase II (415 additional mandis).[16][17] The government announced plans to integrate another 1,000 mandis in 2021-22 to further broaden coverage. A pivotal milestone occurred on January 19, 2019, with the first inter-state trade executed between Gadwal mandi in Andhra Pradesh and a buyer in Telangana, enabling cross-border transactions and reducing logistical barriers.[18] By 2023, the platform linked 1,389 mandis across 23 states and four union territories, facilitating trade in over 200 commodities and marking a shift from localized to nationwide market integration.[19][20] In February 2023, the central government approved the integration of 101 additional APMC mandis to sustain momentum. On July 14, 2022, the e-NAM Platform of Platforms (PoP) was launched, enhancing interoperability with other digital agriculture initiatives. Recent expansions include the addition of 10 commodities on February 6, 2025, and nine more on October 8, 2025, increasing tradable items to 247 and broadening commodity diversity.[21][22][23] As of late 2025, over 1,500 mandis are connected, supporting transparent price discovery and reduced intermediation.[24]Objectives and Principles
Core Objectives
The core objectives of e-NAM, as outlined in its operational framework, center on integrating fragmented agricultural markets across India into a unified national platform to facilitate pan-India trade in commodities. This integration networks existing Agricultural Produce Market Committees (APMCs) and other regulated wholesale markets—initially targeting 585 such venues—through a common electronic trading portal, enabling farmers and sellers to access buyers nationwide without physical relocation of produce.[25][1] By standardizing procedures such as licensing, quality assays, and fee levies, the scheme aims to streamline transactions, reduce information asymmetries between buyers and sellers, and promote uniformity in marketing practices.[25] A primary goal is to enhance transparency and efficiency in price discovery via online auctions, real-time bidding, and electronic payments, which allow competitive pricing without intermediaries dominating local mandis. This fosters better price realization for farmers by exposing them to broader demand signals, while quality assurance mechanisms, including standardized assays at integrated markets, ensure informed bidding and reduce disputes over produce standards.[25][1] Reforms embedded in e-NAM, such as statewide trader licenses and single-point market fees under amended APMC Acts, seek to lower transaction costs and barriers, ultimately aiming to minimize post-harvest losses and improve market accessibility for smallholders who constitute the majority of producers.[1] Additionally, the platform supports consumer benefits through stabilized prices and assured quality supply chains, derived from aggregated national market data and efficient logistics linkages. These objectives align with broader agricultural policy reforms to transition from localized, inefficient mandi systems to a digital ecosystem that leverages technology for equitable trade, though realization depends on state-level adoption and infrastructure compliance.[25]Design Principles for Market Integration
The e-NAM platform is designed as a pan-India electronic trading portal that networks existing Agricultural Produce Market Committee (APMC) mandis to form a unified national market, enabling seamless inter-mandi and inter-state trade without physical relocation of goods.[25] This virtual market structure mandates 100% online trading for selected commodities upon integration, with physical back-end operations such as weighment and quality assaying handled at the local mandi level to maintain operational continuity.[25] The integration prioritizes state-level unification first, requiring participating states to enact reforms like adopting e-auction provisions, issuing a single unified trading license valid across all state mandis, and implementing a single-point levy of market fees, which reduces regulatory fragmentation and promotes trader mobility.[25][26] Central to the design is standardization of processes to eliminate information asymmetry and enhance price discovery: uniform procedures for registration, lot creation, bidding, payments, and dispute resolution are enforced across integrated markets, supported by real-time price dissemination and quality certification via assaying labs equipped with electronic tools for grading.[25] Centralized software, provided free by the Small Farmers' Agribusiness Consortium (SFAC), is customized to align with state-specific marketing regulations, ensuring interoperability while allowing gradual scaling from intra-state to pan-India trade.[26] Quality assaying, conducted at no cost to farmers, informs transparent auctions and fosters competition by enabling buyers nationwide to participate based on standardized grades rather than physical inspection.[25] Further principles emphasize infrastructure-agnostic expansion and ecosystem integration, extending beyond traditional APMC mandis to private markets, warehouses, and farmer producer organizations (FPOs) through open networking protocols akin to digital commerce architectures.[26] States receive financial grants—such as Rs. 30 lakh per market for hardware and Rs. 40 lakh for grading facilities—to upgrade infrastructure, conditional on achieving milestones like full online trading volumes and inter-state linkages.[26] This approach minimizes disruption to legacy systems while incentivizing reforms that curb intermediary dominance, with e-payments and logistics linkages ensuring efficient post-trade fulfillment.[25]Technical Framework
Platform Architecture and Features
The e-NAM platform utilizes a centralized software system developed and maintained by a strategic partner, currently M/s Nagarjuna Fertilizers and Chemicals Ltd. under a contract from 2021 to 2026, which handles design, development, enhancements, and operations.[26] This software is provided free of cost to participating markets and customized to align with state-specific regulations, ensuring interoperability across agricultural produce market committees (APMCs).[26] Hosted on the Meghraj cloud infrastructure by the National Informatics Centre (NIC), the system incorporates servers, firewalls, and load balancers to support scalable operations and data security.[26] The architecture functions as a hierarchical network linking national oversight with state-level coordination and mandi-specific implementations, facilitating a unified virtual marketplace backed by physical infrastructure.[27] At the core, it enables electronic trading where commodities are assayed for quality parameters, lots are created with details on quantity, grade, and variety, and competitive e-auctions occur in real time to determine prices transparently.[26][28] Integration with electronic weighbridges ensures accurate measurement, while online payment gateways linked to banks allow for transaction settlements within one business day, reducing delays in fund transfers to sellers.[26] Key features include support for inter-mandi and inter-state trade, allowing buyers from any integrated mandi to participate in auctions regardless of location, thereby expanding market access.[26] Specialized functionalities encompass Warehouses Based Sale (WBS), where goods stored in certified warehouses can be traded via electronic Negotiable Warehouse Receipts (eNWR), and the "e-NAM Virtual" module, which extends the platform beyond APMC boundaries by interconnecting private trading platforms and non-mandi entities.[26] The system also integrates with ancillary services such as logistics providers, financial institutions for credit, and quality certification labs, promoting a comprehensive digital ecosystem for agricultural commerce.[26] Mandi-level hardware prerequisites comprise desktop computers with Intel Core i3 processors and at least 4 GB RAM, Android-based tablets for field operations like assaying, internet bandwidth of 5-10 Mbps, uninterruptible power supplies (UPS), and calibrated electronic weighbridges to maintain operational reliability.[26] Enhancements introduced include remote bidding via mobile applications and digital payment options, which were piloted to sustain trading during physical restrictions, such as those imposed in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[29] These elements collectively aim to minimize information asymmetries and transaction costs while ensuring verifiable quality and price discovery.[28]Infrastructure Requirements and Integration
Integration of Agricultural Produce Market Committees (APMCs) or Rural Market Committees (RMCs) with the e-NAM platform requires states to enact specific legal reforms in their APMC Acts, including provisions for electronic trading, a single-point levy of market fees, and unified trading licenses valid across integrated markets.[25] These reforms ensure seamless interstate trade without additional barriers, with states submitting Detailed Project Reports (DPRs) for approval by a Project Appraisal Committee.[26] Mandis must commit to 100% online trading of selected commodities, covering processes from gate entry to final sale, to achieve full integration.[25] Hardware infrastructure mandates include procurement of computers with at least Core i3 processors and 4 GB RAM, Android tablets running KitKat or higher, thermal/dot matrix/laser printers, uninterruptible power supplies (UPS), and LED displays or televisions for displaying auction results.[26] Electronic weighbridges—at minimum one per mandi premises—and digital weighing scales must be integrated with the platform via Bluetooth-enabled devices for automated data capture.[30] Internet connectivity requires broadband speeds of 5-10 Mbps, supplemented by Wi-Fi local area networks (LAN) and data card backups to maintain uninterrupted operations.[25] The centralized e-NAM software, provided free by the central government and customized to state-specific regulations, handles core functions like bidder registration, lot creation, and e-auctions.[26] Dedicated e-auction halls are essential, equipped with computers, large monitors or projectors, and reliable internet for real-time bidding.[25] Quality assaying laboratories form a critical component, featuring two cemented rooms each measuring approximately 15 ft x 10 ft for sample storage and analysis, with ventilation, secure access, running water, electricity, power backups, and 300 lux lighting; sensitive instruments require air-conditioned enclosures.[31] Lab equipment, calibrated by the National Accreditation Board for Testing and Calibration Laboratories (NABL) and procured from empanelled vendors via the Government e-Marketplace (GeM), includes near-infrared (NIR) spectroscopy analyzers (costing around Rs. 14 lakhs), digital moisture meters (Rs. 16,500 to 1.5 lakhs), and colorimeters (Rs. 1 lakh), tailored to 90 supported commodities such as cereals, oilseeds, fruits, and vegetables.[32] Labs must employ at least two science graduate analysts with one year of experience, plus trained support staff, and achieve NABL accreditation within 12 months; assay results are uploaded directly to the e-NAM portal to inform bidding without charging farmers.[31] Financial support includes central grants of up to Rs. 30 lakhs per mandi for hardware, internet setup, and basic assaying equipment, with states responsible for additional infrastructure like cleaning/grading units (Rs. 40 lakhs) and ongoing maintenance after five years.[26] Integration also necessitates proximity to soil testing laboratories under schemes like the National Mission for Sustainable Agriculture (NMSA) or Rashtriya Krishi Vikas Yojana (RKVY), and registration on the Public Financial Management System (PFMS) portal for fund disbursement.[25] These elements collectively enable physical mandi infrastructure to interface with the digital platform, fostering transparent, unified trading while leveraging existing assets.[26]Governance and Implementation
Central Agency and Funding
The Small Farmers' Agribusiness Consortium (SFAC), an autonomous society promoted by the Department of Agriculture and Farmers' Welfare under the Ministry of Agriculture and Farmers' Welfare, Government of India, serves as the lead implementing agency for e-NAM.[33][22] SFAC is responsible for developing, operating, and maintaining the electronic trading platform, initially in partnership with a strategic partner, Nagarjuna Fertilizers and Chemicals Limited, to network Agricultural Produce Market Committee (APMC) mandis across states.[1] This role was formalized upon e-NAM's launch on April 14, 2016, with SFAC overseeing the integration of mandis, quality assaying, and electronic payments to facilitate unified national market access for farmers and traders.[34][2] e-NAM operates as a centrally sponsored scheme, fully funded by the Government of India through allocations from the Union Budget under the Department of Agriculture and Farmers' Welfare.[20][35] The central government provides free software for the platform to participating states and financial assistance of up to ₹75 lakh per integrated mandi to cover hardware, civil works, and related infrastructure such as computers, servers, and internet connectivity.[36] States are required to contribute matching funds for certain components, including laboratory equipment for quality testing, while SFAC coordinates with state governments for mandi onboarding and operational compliance.[25] As of fiscal year 2024-25, ongoing budget provisions support platform enhancements, including expansions to new commodities and improved digital infrastructure, reflecting sustained central commitment without specified total outlay caps in public disclosures.[37]State-Level Execution and Coordination
State-level execution of the e-NAM platform is primarily handled by State Agricultural Marketing Boards (SAMBs) or equivalent Directorates of Agricultural Marketing, which serve as nodal agencies for integrating Agricultural Produce Market Committee (APMC) mandis into the national network. These bodies coordinate with the central implementing agency, Small Farmers' Agribusiness Consortium (SFAC), to ensure compliance with operational guidelines, including amendments to state APMC Acts to enable electronic trading, unified licensing for traders, and provisions for inter-state trade without physical movement of goods where applicable.[38][39] States must undertake preliminary reforms before mandi integration, such as incorporating e-trading clauses into their marketing legislation and establishing single-point levy of market fees to facilitate seamless transactions. The nodal state agency is responsible for procuring and installing hardware like computers, biometric devices, and point-of-sale systems in selected mandis, alongside ensuring high-speed internet connectivity compliant with minimum bandwidth standards (e.g., 2 Mbps upload/download). Quality assaying infrastructure, including mobile labs or e-NAM-approved testing facilities, is also mandated at the state level to standardize grading and reduce disputes, with states often partnering with National Accreditation Board for Testing and Calibration Laboratories (NABL)-certified entities.[26][40] Coordination mechanisms include the appointment of state-level e-NAM coordinators, typically under the Directorate of Agricultural Marketing, who oversee training programs for mandi staff, farmers, traders, and commission agents on platform usage, bidding processes, and logistics. These coordinators facilitate regular stakeholder workshops and monitor daily operations, reporting transaction data to the central SFAC dashboard for national oversight. Inter-departmental collaboration at the state level involves agriculture, IT, and rural development ministries to address bottlenecks like digital literacy and last-mile logistics, with periodic reviews through state-level committees comprising APMC representatives and SFAC officials.[30][39][40] Funding for state-level activities is centrally provided under the e-NAM scheme, covering up to 90% of infrastructure costs for the first three years post-integration, with states contributing the balance and assuming full maintenance thereafter. This model incentivizes states to prioritize high-volume mandis for integration, though execution varies by state capacity; for instance, progressive reforms in states like Gujarat and Maharashtra have accelerated adoption through dedicated e-NAM cells within SAMBs. Challenges in coordination, such as delays in assaying lab accreditation or resistance from local trader lobbies, are addressed via central advisories and capacity-building grants, ensuring alignment with the platform's goal of a unified market.[41][40]Adoption and Scale
Mandi Integrations and Participation Metrics
As of September 30, 2025, the e-NAM platform has integrated 1,473 agricultural wholesale markets (mandis) across 18 states and 3 union territories, enabling digital trading linkages between physical markets and a unified national portal.[42] This integration process involves states onboarding their regulated markets by providing infrastructure such as quality assaying facilities, electronic weighbridges, and internet connectivity, with the Small Farmers' Agribusiness Consortium (SFAC) overseeing technical support.[43] Recent expansions include additions like 21 mandis in Rajasthan, contributing to incremental growth, though full nationwide coverage remains partial as of late 2025.[22] Participation metrics reflect steady user registration, with 1.79 crore farmers, 2.70 lakh traders, 1.18 lakh commission agents, and 4,610 farmer producer organizations (FPOs) enlisted on the platform as of September 30, 2025.[42] These figures indicate broader stakeholder engagement compared to earlier years, where registrations hovered around 1.77 crore farmers and 2.5 lakh traders in 2024, driven by awareness campaigns and state-level incentives for FPOs.[44] Traders and commission agents primarily facilitate interstate transactions, while FPOs aggregate smallholder produce for competitive bidding.[42] Trade metrics underscore platform utilization, with cumulative volumes reaching 12.03 crore metric tonnes valued at ₹4,39,941 crore as of July 29, 2025, spanning commodities like grains, pulses, and spices.[43] This equates to an average daily trade value exceeding ₹100 crore in peak seasons, with higher participation in states like Uttar Pradesh and Maharashtra accounting for disproportionate shares due to denser mandi networks.[43] However, active transaction rates vary, as not all registered users engage regularly, limited by factors such as digital literacy and local market dynamics.[20]Commodity Coverage and Recent Additions
The e-NAM platform supports trading in 247 agricultural commodities as of October 2025, spanning categories such as food grains and cereals (38 items), oilseeds (14), fruits (48), vegetables (59), spices (17), and miscellaneous products (62), including processed and medicinal variants.[45][23] These encompass staples like paddy, wheat, and pulses alongside perishables such as tomatoes, onions, and mangoes, with standardized quality assaying parameters defined by the Directorate of Marketing and Inspection (DMI) to enable transparent, grade-based pricing across integrated mandis.[46] Expansions in 2025 have prioritized diversification into value-added, niche, and regional products to reduce post-harvest losses and improve farmer access to broader markets. In February 2025, ten commodities were added, including besan (chickpea flour), dried tulsi leaves, wheat flour, chana sattu (roasted chickpea flour), and dragon fruit, focusing on processed foods and emerging horticultural items.[47] Further additions in July 2025 incorporated seven regionally significant products, such as sugarcane, Marcha rice, Katarni rice, Jardalu mango, Shahi litchi, Magahi paan, and Banarasi paan, emphasizing geographical indication-tagged varieties.[48] The most recent update on October 8, 2025, integrated nine new commodities—green tea, tea, ashwagandha dry roots, mustard oil, lavender oil, mentha oil, virgin olive oil, lavender dried flower, and broken rice—elevating the total to 247 after consultations with stakeholders and DMI approval of tradable quality parameters.[23] These inclusions target essential oils, beverages, and medicinal herbs, aiming to minimize intermediary roles and facilitate interstate trade through e-auction mechanisms.[23]Performance and Impact
Economic Outcomes for Stakeholders
Farmers participating in e-NAM-integrated mandis have experienced improved price realization due to increased competition among buyers and transparent bidding processes. A performance review across multiple states found that e-NAM adoption correlated with a 5.5% average price increase compared to pre-implementation periods, with specific gains of 21% for cotton and 19% for paddy in surveyed markets.[49] Additionally, 56% of farmers reported receiving higher prices through the platform, and 44% viewed e-NAM transactions as superior to traditional manual mandi sales in terms of outcomes and facilities.[49] An independent evaluation indicated that 41% of farmers achieved price premiums exceeding 10% relative to physical markets, with 68% expressing satisfaction over remunerative returns enabled by better price discovery.[50] These gains stem from reduced intermediary influence and access to out-of-mandi buyers, though they apply primarily to the subset of farmers in 1,361 integrated mandis as of 2023, representing limited national coverage.[51] Traders and buyers benefit from e-NAM's networked access to produce across states, allowing remote bidding and expanded sourcing without physical relocation, which 45% of traders linked to higher transaction volumes in integrated markets.[49] The platform's quality assaying and e-payments further reduce risks of disputes and delays, promoting efficiency for registered buyers numbering over 2.53 lakh as of early 2024.[28] However, these advantages are constrained by predominantly intra-mandi and intra-state trades, with inter-state volumes dropping to 3,935 tonnes in fiscal year 2024-25 from 18,005 tonnes the prior year, reflecting persistent logistical and regulatory barriers to pan-India integration.[52] Agricultural Produce Market Committee (APMC) mandis gain from streamlined operations, including automated bidding and reduced manual record-keeping, which enhance administrative efficiency in networked yards.[53] Satisfaction with e-NAM facilities like weighing reached 96.6% in some assessments, supporting higher throughput for participating APMCs.[49] Yet, infrastructure deficits—such as inadequate grading (83% dissatisfaction) and connectivity issues—affect 78% of operations, limiting broader economic uplift for mandi operators and capping e-NAM's share at approximately 6% of total APMC trade volumes as of fiscal year 2023-24.[49][6] Aggregate economic activity through e-NAM has scaled to a cumulative trade value of ₹4,39,941 crore by July 2025, involving over 8.96 crore metric tonnes since inception and registering 1.77 crore farmers.[51][28] Fiscal year 2024-25 turnover rose marginally by 2% to ₹80,262 crore, signaling incremental but not transformative growth amid challenges like low inter-state penetration and uneven adoption.[54] Empirical evidence thus points to localized stakeholder gains in price and efficiency, tempered by systemic hurdles that prevent realization of a fully unified national market.Empirical Data on Trade and Prices
Cumulative trade on the e-NAM platform reached ₹4,39,941 crores in value and 12.03 crore metric tonnes in volume as of June 30, 2025, spanning 1,522 integrated mandis across India.[55] This encompasses both intra- and inter-state transactions since the platform's inception in 2016, with 238 notified commodities available for trading.[55] Earlier data as of December 31, 2024, recorded a trade volume of 11.02 crore metric tonnes and a value of approximately ₹42.89 lakh crores, indicating steady expansion in overall activity.[37] Inter-state trade, a key objective for national market integration, has remained limited relative to intra-state volumes. In fiscal year 2023-24, inter-state trade volume was 18,005 metric tonnes, declining to 3,935 metric tonnes in 2024-25, with only 472.62 metric tonnes recorded by early 2025-26.[56] The platform's share in total Agricultural Produce Market Committee (APMC) trade stood at around 6% in fiscal year 2023-24, reflecting constraints in broader adoption despite growth in registered participants—1.79 crore farmers and over 2.6 lakh traders by mid-2025.[57][55] Empirical analyses indicate positive effects on price realization for farmers in integrated mandis. A difference-in-differences study using panel data from Andhra Pradesh (2013-2019) found that e-NAM integration led to enhanced price transparency and reduced information asymmetry, resulting in higher prices received by sellers compared to non-integrated markets.[58] Similarly, econometric evaluations in other regions, including Karnataka's precursor unified platform, reported increased farmer prices and arrivals, with e-NAM contributing to better discovery through competitive bidding.[59][4] Survey-based evidence from pilot implementations showed a notable rise in average price per quintal for traded produce, alongside expanded inter-state participation, though overall market integration for specific commodities like onions improved wholesale price convergence post-e-NAM rollout.[60][5]| Metric | Value as of June 30, 2025 | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Integrated Mandis | 1,522 | [55] |
| Cumulative Trade Value | ₹4,39,941 crores | [55] |
| Cumulative Trade Volume | 12.03 crore MT | [55] |
| Registered Farmers | 1.79 crore | [55] |
| Notified Commodities | 238 | [55] |