The Revival Movement: Dr. R.C. Chaudhary, IRRI, and the Return of Kalanamak
In 2012, Dr. R.C. Chaudhary at the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) identified 14 preserved herbarium strains of Kalanamak rice and used them to reconstitute a viable seed stock. This effort rescued the grain from functional extinction and returned it to cultivation in Siddharthnagar, directly enabling the GI tag granted the following year in 2013.
By the early 2000s, Kalanamak existed more as a memory than a market reality. A handful of farming families in Siddharthnagar still grew it, but the variety had no organised supply chain, no premium price signal, and no institutional support. The seed that would have allowed a full commercial revival was held not in fields but in research archives — preserved, but dormant. The story of how it came back is the story of Dr. R.C. Chaudhary and the scientific infrastructure of IRRI.
- Scientist: Dr. R.C. Chaudhary, rice researcher at IRRI (International Rice Research Institute).
- Year: 2012 — the year seed reconstitution and revival began.
- Source material: 14 preserved herbarium strains of Kalanamak held in institutional collections.
- Outcome: Viable, farmable Kalanamak seed returned to Siddharthnagar farmers.
- GI tag followed in 2013 — the legal protection that made the revival commercially sustainable.
- Without this scientific intervention, Kalanamak's genetic material might have been lost from active cultivation entirely.
Why Kalanamak needed a scientific rescue
The near-disappearance of Kalanamak was not the result of any single failure. It was a slow erosion driven by the economics of post-Green Revolution agriculture in India. High-yield hybrid rice varieties, which produce significantly more grain per acre in 90 days, became the default choice for paddy farmers across Eastern UP from the 1970s onward. Kalanamak, which needs 140–150 days and yields less per acre, could not compete on a pure volume-per-acre calculation.
Market prices did not compensate for the difference. Without a premium — and without institutional buyers who recognised and paid for the grain's distinct qualities — Kalanamak farming was economically irrational for most households. Each season, another few families switched to hybrids. By the 1990s, the variety was confined to a small number of villages in Siddharthnagar where it survived as a subsistence crop or from cultural attachment rather than commercial viability.
The danger was that even these remaining pockets would eventually switch. If that happened, the variety's genetic material would exist only in institutional seed banks — preserved, but disconnected from the knowledge, the soil, and the farming practice that gave it its character. Read the full near-extinction story →
What IRRI is and why it matters for heritage rice
The International Rice Research Institute (IRRI), headquartered in Los Baños, Philippines, is the world's leading rice research institution. One of its core functions is the maintenance of a germplasm bank — a repository of genetic material from thousands of rice varieties, including traditional landraces from across Asia that are no longer in active commercial cultivation.
Germplasm banks exist precisely for situations like Kalanamak's: when a variety retreats from commercial agriculture, its genetic material can survive in collected, preserved form even if its fields are gone. The IRRI gene bank holds more than 132,000 rice accessions — one of the most comprehensive collections of rice genetic diversity on earth.
Kalanamak strains were among those held in institutional collections. The grain's distinctive character — its aroma profile, its specific soil relationship, its nutritional traits — was encoded in that preserved genetic material, waiting for a researcher to recognise its value and take the steps to restore it to cultivation.
Dr. R.C. Chaudhary and the 14 strains
Dr. R.C. Chaudhary's contribution was both scientific and strategic. He identified 14 herbarium strains of Kalanamak within the institutional collections and recognised that these strains represented sufficient genetic diversity to reconstitute a viable, farmable population of the variety. Working with this material, he conducted the seed multiplication and selection work required to produce grain that could be sown in fields rather than stored in archives.
The number 14 matters. A revival built on a single preserved strain would carry very limited genetic diversity — making the resulting crop population potentially fragile and uniform in ways that increase vulnerability to disease or environmental stress. Fourteen strains provided a more robust genetic base, increasing the chances that the revived population would carry the range of traits — including aroma expression, grain quality, and adaptation to Terai soil conditions — that defined Kalanamak at its best.
This work was conducted in 2012. The seed was then introduced to farmers in Siddharthnagar, where the revival of active field cultivation began.
| Year | Event | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| Late 1990s–2000s | Kalanamak confined to a handful of Siddharthnagar villages | Near-extinction in active cultivation |
| 2012 | Dr. R.C. Chaudhary (IRRI) reconstitutes seed from 14 herbarium strains | Revival begins; seed returned to farmers |
| 2013 | GI (Geographical Indication) tag granted | Legal origin protection established |
| Post-2013 | ODOP designation (Siddharthnagar) | Government market promotion added |
| 2020s | Commercial distribution nationally | Grain reaches consumers across India |
The link between the revival and the GI tag
The GI tag granted in 2013 was not independent of the 2012 revival. The reconstitution of a viable, documented, farmable seed population provided the foundation for a formal GI application: it established that there was an identified, characterisable variety with traceable provenance to the Terai belt. Without a documented seed stock and active cultivation, a GI application for a near-extinct variety would have had limited credibility.
The sequence matters: seed first (2012), legal protection second (2013). Each step enabled the next. The seed revival created the farming base; the GI tag created the market premium that made continuing to farm it economically rational. How the GI tag works →
What this means for the Kalanamak you buy today
Every bag of Kalanamak rice available today — including TeraiFarms' GI-tagged grain — traces its seed lineage to the 2012 revival effort. The variety is not a modern creation or a branded reformulation; it is a 2,600-year-old landrace that passed through a bottleneck of 14 preserved strains and returned to the same Terai soil it has occupied for generations.
That lineage has implications for authenticity. Genuine Kalanamak, grown in the GI-tagged Terai districts from the revived seed stock, carries the aroma and nutritional characteristics documented in research literature. Rice sold as "Kalanamak" from non-GI origins, or sprayed with synthetic 2-AP fragrance, does not share that lineage.
The farmers of Siddharthnagar who grow the grain today are the custodians of what Dr. Chaudhary rescued. Meet the farmers of Siddharthnagar →
The grain that scientists saved
GI-tagged Kalanamak, revived from 14 strains in 2012. Low-heat milled, vacuum-packed, from Siddharthnagar.
Shop Kalanamak · Rs 449Frequently asked questions
Who revived Kalanamak rice?
When was Kalanamak rice revived?
What is IRRI and what role did it play in saving Kalanamak?
How many strains of Kalanamak were used in the revival?
What happened after the 2012 Kalanamak revival?
- IRRI (International Rice Research Institute) — Dr. R.C. Chaudhary, germplasm conservation and Kalanamak reconstitution research (2012).
- Geographical Indications Registry, Government of India — Kalanamak rice GI record (2013).
- ICAR–National Rice Research Institute — Kalanamak varietal studies and revival documentation.