IFFCO Was Born in Gujarat — Here’s the Untold Story of How It Became the World’s Largest Fertiliser Cooperative

IFFCO Was Born in Gujarat — Here's the Untold Story of How It Became the World's Largest Fertiliser Cooperative

In the summer of 1966, a groundnut farmer in Mehsana district, Gujarat, watched his crop wilt — not from drought, but from the sheer impossibility of buying fertiliser at a price he could afford. That year, India imported nearly 60% of its fertiliser requirement, and private traders in rural Gujarat marked up prices by margins that made farming a losing bet. I have spent years covering the cooperative sector, and no origin story fascinates me quite like what happened next — how that farmer’s desperation became the seed for an institution that now serves over 35,000 cooperative societies and touches the lives of approximately 50 million Indian farmers.

The institution I am talking about is Indian Farmers Fertiliser Cooperative Limited (IFFCO), registered on 3 November 1967. What most people do not know is that IFFCO was not a government project imposed from Delhi. It was a grassroots demand, channelled through cooperative networks in Gujarat, that eventually convinced policymakers to back one of the boldest experiments in India’s agricultural history.

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Beyond Amul — The Lesser-Known Gujarat Cooperatives That Are Quietly Dominating Global Markets

Beyond Amul — The Lesser-Known Gujarat Cooperatives That Are Quietly Dominating Global Markets

A milk farmer in Banaskantha earning ₹45,000 per month from eight buffaloes — not through Amul, but through a cooperative most Indians have never heard of. That single detail, which I stumbled upon during a reporting trip to northern Gujarat last year, cracked open a story I hadn’t expected: the world of Gujarat cooperatives that … Read more

How Cooperative Healthcare Is Making Hospitals Affordable in Rural India

How Cooperative Healthcare Is Making Hospitals Affordable in Rural India

When a seasonal farm worker in Bilaspur, Chhattisgarh needed an appendectomy in 2023, the nearest district government hospital had no surgeon available that week. The private clinic nearby quoted ₹75,000 — roughly five months of his annual income. What saved him was a community-owned health cooperative that performed the same procedure, including post-operative care, for … Read more