🏷 Geographical Indication (GI) Tags — India's Invaluable Treasures
Definition · GI Act 1999 · GI vs Trademark · 658 GI Tags (July 2025) · State-wise List · First GI: Darjeeling Tea · Prada-Kolhapuri Controversy June 2025 · GI Samagam Jan 2025 (10,000 GIs by 2030) · Joint GIs · Recent GIs · PYQs & MCQs
Darjeeling Tea — India's first GI tag (2004–05). The unique "muscatel" flavour of Darjeeling tea comes from the specific altitude (2,000m+), climate, and soil of the Darjeeling hills in West Bengal — qualities that cannot be replicated elsewhere. The GI tag is now recognised and enforced in 36+ countries. (Source: Wikimedia Commons)
Kancheepuram Silk Saree (Tamil Nadu) — One of India's most prestigious GI-tagged handicrafts. These sarees are known for their heavy pure mulberry silk, rich zari work with gold/silver threads, and distinctive temple borders — characteristics only achievable in Kanchipuram. A GI-tagged Kancheepuram saree carries premium value. (Source: Wikimedia Commons)
⚖ GI Tag vs Trademark — The Critical Differences
✅ Cannot be transferred or sold — tied permanently to the geographical region
✅ Cannot be licensed to someone outside the defined region
✅ Protects quality and origin — any producer in the region meeting standards can use it
✅ Duration: 10 years, renewable indefinitely
✅ Administered by GI Registry (Chennai) under CGPDTM
✅ Governed by GI Act 1999
✅ Examples: Darjeeling Tea, Mysore Silk, Kashmir Saffron
➡ Can be transferred — sold, assigned, inherited
➡ Can be licensed — franchised to any party anywhere
➡ Protects brand identity — quality not necessarily tied to origin
➡ Duration: 10 years, renewable indefinitely
➡ Administered by Trade Marks Registry under CGPDTM
➡ Governed by Trademarks Act 1999
➡ Examples: Tata, Amul, Infosys logos
Came into force: 15 September 2003
Under: Ministry of Commerce & Industry → DPIIT
Administered by: GI Registry located in Chennai
Overall authority: Controller General of Patents, Designs and Trade Marks (CGPDTM)
Duration: 10 years, renewable indefinitely
Reason enacted: India's obligation under TRIPS Agreement (WTO, 1994) — Article 22-24 mandates GI protection
Also recognised under: Paris Convention (1883) as industrial property
Paris Convention (1883, WIPO): First international treaty recognising GIs as industrial property.
Lisbon Agreement (1958, WIPO): International registration for "appellations of origin" (a stricter category of GIs). India is NOT a party — limiting global enforcement. India's GI tags have no automatic protection abroad.
Madrid System: Can be used for collective/certification marks that serve similar purposes to GIs.
📝 GI Tag Registration Process — Step by Step
| Category | Fact | UPSC Relevance |
|---|---|---|
| 🥇 First GI in India | Darjeeling Tea (West Bengal) — 2004–05 | Most tested GI fact in UPSC. Also first GI in India to be globally registered in 36+ countries. The muscatel flavour is unique to Darjeeling's terroir. |
| 📊 Total GI tags | 658 registered GIs as of July 2025 (605 as of January 2025 at GI Samagam) | GI Samagam Jan 2025 (New Delhi): Minister Piyush Goyal set target of 10,000 GIs by 2030. Theme: "Preserving Heritage, Fostering Innovation." |
| 🏆 Leading state | Uttar Pradesh — 69+ GI-tagged products (leading all states) | Varanasi alone has 30 GI-tagged products: Banaras Thandai, Banaras Shehnai, Banaras Tabla, Banaras Lal Peda, Banaras Mural Painting, etc. |
| 2️⃣ Second state | Tamil Nadu — follows UP in number of GI tags | TN has the most GI tags for handicrafts (Kancheepuram Silk, Toda Embroidery, Thanjavur Paintings, etc.) |
| 🌏 Joint GI | Basmati Rice — 7 states jointly (Punjab, Haryana, HP, Delhi, Uttarakhand, UP, J&K) | Basmati has GI protection in India. EU basmati dispute is ongoing — India pushing for full EU recognition. WTO TRIPS Article 23 "enhanced protection" campaign. |
| 🐜 Unusual GI (2024) | Similipal Kai Chutney (Odisha) — made from red weaver ants. GI granted 2 January 2024. | Tribal community product from Mayurbhanj district. Highest protein density of any edible product from the region. Represents GI protecting tribal knowledge. |
| 🥂 First alcohol GI | Feni (Goa) — cashew/coconut spirit | Feni is the first spirit to receive a GI tag in India. A GI product cannot be manufactured or sold under its GI name outside the defined region. |
| 🌐 GI Registry location | Chennai (part of Intellectual Property India / CGPDTM) | Applications filed at GI Registry, Chennai. Registrar processes and maintains the register. Under Ministry of Commerce & Industry (DPIIT). |
| ⚡ Prada controversy (2025) | Prada (Italy) showcased Kolhapuri chappal-inspired footwear at Milan show (June 2025) | Shows limitation of GI: territorial protection. India's GI has no automatic force in Italy/EU unless separately registered. Cultural appropriation debate. Kolhapuri chappal GI: 2019 (joint — Maharashtra & Karnataka). |
| 📱 GI logo & tagline | "Invaluable Treasures of Incredible India" — India's GI logo and tagline | Launched to foster awareness and help consumers identify authentic GI-tagged products. |
| 🌾 APEDA & GI exports | APEDA facilitates GI product exports — Naga Mircha (Nagaland) and Black Rice (Manipur) exported to UK | Agricultural and Processed Food Products Export Development Authority helps GI products reach international markets. Shows economic value of GI system. |
Agricultural Guntur Sannam Chilli, Banaganapalle Mangoes
Foodstuff Tirupati Laddu, Bandar Laddu
Agricultural Khaw Tai (Khamti Rice), Arunachal Yak Churpi
Manufactured Judima (traditional rice wine of Dimasa community)
Manufactured Bhagalpuri Zardalu (mango), Katarni Rice
Foodstuff Silao Khaja
Agricultural Khola Chilli
Agricultural Bhalia Wheat
Agricultural Kangra Tea
Manufactured Mysore Sandal Soap, Mysore Agarbathi
Agricultural Coorg Orange, Coorg Green Cardamom, Devanahalli Pomello, Byadagi Chilli, Appemidi Mango, Indi Limbe
Agricultural Navara Rice, Pokkali Rice, Kaipad Rice, Chengalikodan Nendran Banana, Nilambur Teak, Tirur Betel Leaf, Attappady Thuvara
Agricultural Sharbati Gehu (famous golden wheat)
Foodstuff Jhabua Kadaknath Black Chicken Meat, Ratlami Sev
Agricultural Nashik Grapes, Alphonso Mango (Ratnagiri), Lasalgaon Onion, Ambemohar Rice, Ajara Ghansal Rice, Mangalwedha Jowar, Sangli Raisins, Navapur Tur Dal
Handicraft (Manipur) Shaphee Lanphee, Wangkhei Phee
Agricultural (Nagaland) Naga Mircha (Ghost Pepper) — exported to UK
Agricultural Kandhamal Haladi (turmeric), Koraput Kalajeera Rice
Foodstuff Similipal Kai Chutney (red weaver ant chutney, GI: 2 Jan 2024)
Natural Makrana Marble (used in Taj Mahal!)
Agricultural Madurai Malli (jasmine), Erode Turmeric
Foodstuff Kovilpatti Kadalai Mittai (peanut candy), Salem Sago
Agricultural Malihabadi Dussehri Mango, Kalanamak Rice
Joint Basmati (7-state joint GI)
Agricultural Darjeeling Tea (First GI!), Tulapanji Rice, Gobindobhog Rice
Foodstuff Joynagar Moa, Bardhaman Sitabhog, Odisha Rasgulla (joint with Odisha)
Agricultural (J&K) Ramban Sulai Honey, Mushqbudji Rice, Bhaderwah Rajmash, Kashmir Saffron
Agricultural (Ladakh) Raktsey Karpo Apricot
- Karnataka & Kerala: Monsooned Malabar Robusta Coffee, Monsooned Malabar Arabica Coffee
- Kerala & Tamil Nadu: Alleppey Green Cardamom
- Maharashtra, Gujarat, Dadra & Nagar Haveli, Daman & Diu: Warli Painting
- Punjab, Rajasthan & Haryana: Phulkari (embroidery)
- Manipur & Nagaland: Chak-hao (Black Rice)
- Maharashtra & Karnataka: Kolhapuri Chappal (GI 2019)
India's reaction: Sharp criticism and public outrage in India. Kolhapuri chappal manufacturers planning legal action against Prada for cultural appropriation. Reignited debate about whether GI protection is strong enough globally.
GI protection is territorial — India's GI Act protects the Kolhapuri chappal name ONLY within India. It has no automatic legal force in Italy, EU, or the US unless separately registered there.
Prada did not use the name "Kolhapuri" — using an "inspired by" design without the name technically avoids Indian GI violation. Under Italian law, designs inspired by traditional crafts from other countries face no legal restriction.
Theme: "Preserving Heritage, Fostering Innovation"
Key announcement: Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal set a target of 10,000 GI Tags by 2030 (from 605 at that time). Committee to be formed for whole-of-government approach.
Vision: "Vikas bhi aur Virasat bhi" (Development as well as Heritage) — PM Modi's phrase
Action: GI products to be promoted on GeM (Government e-Marketplace). E-commerce platforms encouraged to promote GI products.
10-year data: Authorised users for GI tags grew from 365 to 29,000. Patents granted grew from 6,000 to 100,000.
| Recent GI Tag | State | Year | Significance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Similipal Kai Chutney | Odisha (Mayurbhanj) | Jan 2, 2024 | Made from red weaver ants (Oecophylla smaragdina) by tribal communities. High protein content. Unique tribal traditional knowledge protection. |
| Basohli Pashmina & Painting | J&K (Basohli, Kathua) | 2024 | Rare Pashmina from Basohli region — distinct from Kashmiri Pashmina. Also Basohli painting (Pahari miniature art school). |
| Tweed Fabric | J&K | 2024 | Traditional woven woollen fabric from J&K hills. Distinct from Scottish tweed — Indian version with local characteristics. |
| Loi Blankets (Kishtwar) | J&K (Kishtwar) | 2024 | Traditional handwoven blankets from Kishtwar district. Distinct warmth and texture from high-altitude wool. |
| Chikri Wood Craft | J&K | 2024 | Traditional woodcraft from J&K — known for intricate carving patterns on Chikri wood. |
| Arunachal Yak Churpi | Arunachal Pradesh | 2024 | Hard cheese made from milk of the Arunachali yak — rare breed. Nutritionally dense traditional dairy product. |
| Khaw Tai (Khamti Rice) | Arunachal Pradesh | 2024 | Traditional rice variety of the Khamti people of Arunachal. Aromatic, glutinous rice with cultural significance. |
- Darjeeling Tea was the first product to receive a GI tag in India.
- GI tags can be transferred or sold to any person or organisation, just like trademarks.
- The Geographical Indications Registry is located in Chennai.
- GI protection in India automatically extends to all countries that have signed the TRIPS agreement.
- a) 1 and 3 only
- b) 1 and 3 only ✓
- c) 1, 2 and 3
- d) 2 and 4 only
Statement 2 WRONG: GI tags CANNOT be transferred or sold. This is a fundamental difference from trademarks. GI is a community/collective right — it belongs permanently to the producers of a specific geographical region. It cannot be licensed to someone outside the region. Unlike trademarks (which can be bought, sold, or franchised globally), GIs are non-transferable.
Statement 3 CORRECT: The Geographical Indications Registry is indeed located in Chennai, under the Controller General of Patents, Designs and Trade Marks (CGPDTM), under the Ministry of Commerce & Industry (DPIIT).
Statement 4 WRONG: GI protection is STRICTLY TERRITORIAL. India's GI tag protects the product only within India. Other TRIPS signatories have their own GI protection systems — India's domestic GI has no automatic force in the EU, USA, Japan, etc. This is the key limitation exposed by the Prada-Kolhapuri controversy (2025). India must separately register GIs in other countries to get protection there.
Model Answer Framework:
- Introduction: Define GI — sign identifying products with specific geographical origin where qualities are attributable to that place. India: 658 GI tags (July 2025). GI Act 1999. First GI: Darjeeling Tea (2004–05). Target: 10,000 GIs by 2030 (GI Samagam, Jan 2025).
- Transformative role — Rural economy: Price premium for GI products (Darjeeling tea commands 200–400% premium vs non-GI tea). Direct income to artisans. Prevents copies from undercutting genuine producers. APEDA facilitates export (Naga Mircha, Black Rice exported to UK). 29,000 authorised users (from 365 in 2015).
- Transformative role — Cultural preservation: Saves traditional crafts (Madhubani paintings, Toda embroidery, Aranmula Kannadi). Protects tribal knowledge (Similipal Kai Chutney, 2024). Preserves biodiversity-linked varieties (Navara rice, Kalanamak rice). NEP 2020 and GI linked to traditional knowledge preservation.
- Critical examination — Limitations: Territorial protection only — Prada-Kolhapuri (2025). Low producer awareness — many artisans unaware. Benefits captured by intermediaries, not artisans. Counterfeit problem (fake Banarasi silk from Surat). Climate change threatening quality basis (Kashmir Saffron, Darjeeling Tea). India not in Lisbon Agreement — no global GI registry access.
- TRIPS gap: Enhanced protection only for wines/spirits (Article 23). India advocates for ALL products — especially spices, textiles, rice — at WTO. Developed countries resist.
- Way forward: Join Lisbon Agreement / register GIs in export markets. Strengthened GeMmarket linkages. GI Samagam model — district-level GI outreach. Cooperative structures for artisans. Climate adaptation clauses in GI standards. Target: 10,000 GIs by 2030 through whole-of-government approach.
- (a) Basmati rice has a GI tag from a single state — Punjab — as it is primarily grown there
- (b) Basmati rice received the world's first GI protection in India in 2004 along with Darjeeling Tea
- (c) Basmati rice has a joint GI tag shared by seven states: Punjab, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Delhi, Uttarakhand, Uttar Pradesh, and J&K
- (d) Basmati rice GI is uncontested globally and fully accepted by the EU, USA, and Pakistan without dispute
- (a) India's GI Act 1999 does not protect handicraft items — only agricultural products
- (b) Kolhapuri chappal had not received a valid GI tag in India, making the products legally unprotected
- (c) The GI Registrar failed to renew the Kolhapuri chappal GI tag, causing it to lapse before Prada's fashion show
- (d) GI protection in India is territorial — India's domestic GI has no automatic legal force in countries like Italy, and Prada's use of Kolhapuri-inspired designs in Milan did not technically violate Indian GI law
1. Similipal Kai Chutney — (a) Goa
2. Feni — (b) Odisha
3. Aranmula Kannadi — (c) Kerala
4. Muga Silk — (d) Assam
- (a) 1-b, 2-a, 3-c, 4-d (all wrong)
- (b) 1-c, 2-b, 3-a, 4-d
- (c) 1-a, 2-b, 3-d, 4-c
- (d) 1-b, 2-a, 3-c, 4-d (all correct)
- (a) 365
- (b) 605
- (c) 658
- (d) 1,000
- (a) Kashmiri Pashmina
- (b) Chak-hao (Black Rice)
- (c) Kolhapuri Chappal
- (d) Phulkari Embroidery
| Topic | Key Facts to Remember |
|---|---|
| Definition | Sign on products with specific geographical origin where qualities are essentially attributable to that place. Collective IPR — not individual. Cannot be transferred or sold. Non-transferable, non-licensable. |
| Law in India | Geographical Indications of Goods (Registration and Protection) Act, 1999. In force: 15 September 2003. Under DPIIT, Ministry of Commerce. GI Registry: Chennai. Administered by CGPDTM. Duration: 10 years, indefinitely renewable. |
| GI vs Trademark | GI = collective/community property, tied to geography, non-transferable, non-licensable. Trademark = private property, can be sold/transferred/licensed anywhere. |
| First GI India | Darjeeling Tea (West Bengal) — 2004–05. Also India's most internationally recognised GI (36+ countries). |
| Total GI count | 605 (January 2025, at GI Samagam) → 658 (July 2025). Target: 10,000 by 2030 (announced by Piyush Goyal at GI Samagam, 22 January 2025, New Delhi). |
| Leading state | Uttar Pradesh (69+ products). Varanasi alone: 30 GI products (Banaras Thandai, Shehnai, Tabla, Lal Peda, Mural Painting...). Tamil Nadu follows (most handicraft GIs). |
| Joint GIs — Key | Basmati (7 states: PB, HR, HP, DL, UK, UP, J&K) · Kolhapuri Chappal (Maharashtra + Karnataka) · Phulkari (Punjab + Rajasthan + Haryana) · Chak-hao (Manipur + Nagaland) · Warli Painting (MH + GJ + DNH + DD) |
| Recent GI 2024 | Similipal Kai Chutney (Odisha — red weaver ant chutney, tribal knowledge, Jan 2024) · Basohli Pashmina · Tweed Fabric · Loi Blankets (Kishtwar) · Arunachal Yak Churpi · Khaw Tai Rice |
| Prada-Kolhapuri 2025 | Prada showcased Kolhapuri-inspired footwear at Milan (June 2025) without credit. Legal action planned. Key lesson: GI protection is TERRITORIAL — no automatic force outside India. Kolhapuri chappal GI granted 2019 (Joint: Maharashtra + Karnataka). |
| International framework | TRIPS Agreement (WTO): Articles 22–24. Paris Convention (1883). Lisbon Agreement (India NOT a member). Madrid System. TRIPS Article 23 enhanced protection only for wines/spirits — India advocates extending to all products. |
| Challenges | Territorial limitation · Low registrations vs China (9,785) · Enforcement gaps (fake Banarasi, fake Kolhapuri) · TRIPS enhanced protection gap · Climate change (Darjeeling Tea, Kashmir Saffron) · Intermediaries capturing premiums |
| GI Samagam 2025 | January 22, 2025, New Delhi. Organised by DPIIT + India Today Group. Theme: "Preserving Heritage, Fostering Innovation." Target: 10,000 GIs by 2030. Vision: "Vikas bhi aur Virasat bhi." Promotion via GeM platform. |
Trap 1 — "GI tags can be sold or transferred like trademarks" → WRONG! GI tags are non-transferable and non-licensable. They belong to the collective producers of a geographical region — permanently. No individual or company can "buy" a GI tag and use it outside the defined region. This is the most fundamental difference from trademarks. Trademarks can be bought, sold, and licensed globally. GIs cannot — they are permanently tied to the geography and community of origin.
Trap 2 — "India's GI protection automatically extends to other TRIPS countries" → WRONG! GI protection is strictly territorial. India's GI Act protects products ONLY within India. In the EU, USA, Japan, etc., India's domestic GI has NO automatic force. The Prada-Kolhapuri case (2025) perfectly illustrates this — Prada's use of Kolhapuri design in Milan violated no Indian law. India must separately register GIs in target markets. India is not a member of the Lisbon Agreement (global GI registration system) — a major gap.
Trap 3 — "Darjeeling Tea is the first GI in Asia / globally" → WRONG! (and the distinction matters) Darjeeling Tea was India's first GI (2004–05) — but not the world's first (European countries have had GIs for centuries, e.g., Champagne). Also, while Darjeeling Tea is internationally recognised, do not overstate its significance as "the world's first." The correct statement: India's first GI tag was given to Darjeeling Tea in 2004–05.
Trap 4 — "TRIPS gives equal protection to all GI products including rice, textiles, spices" → WRONG! TRIPS Article 23 gives enhanced (absolute) protection ONLY to wines and spirits. All other products — including India's critical exports of spices, basmati rice, textiles, handicrafts — only get basic protection (Articles 22-23 basic level), which only prevents misleading use. India has long campaigned at WTO for extending Article 23 enhanced protection to all products — this is the "Extension of GI" demand. Developed countries (EU wines, USA) resist because they hold most wine/spirit GIs.
Trap 5 — "GI Samagam 2025 set a target of 10,000 GIs and India currently has 10,000 GIs" → WRONG! At GI Samagam (January 2025), India had 605 GI tags. The target of 10,000 by 2030 was announced at the Samagam — it is a future goal, NOT a current achievement. By July 2025, India reached 658. The goal of 10,000 requires registering approximately 9,342 more GIs in 5 years — a massive 16x increase that requires identifying and formalising thousands of unregistered traditional products.


