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The Documentary Podcast

The Saltmakers

The Documentary Podcast

BBC

Society & Culture, Documentary

4.32.7K Ratings

🗓️ 2 April 2026

⏱️ 27 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In India's Gujarat state lies the Little Rann of Kutch, a sprawling salt marsh desert where temperatures soar to 50 degrees Celsius. This harsh landscape is home to the Agariyas, nomadic tribal families who have harvested salt here since the 16th Century. For eight months of every year, they migrate to this harsh environment, living in temporary shacks and pumping briny groundwater into vast pans where it evaporates into gleaming, sturdy crystals. This traditional practice, responsible for 75% of India's salt production, is now under a grave existential threat. Seasonal cycles, predictable for centuries, have become erratic. Unexpected rains and sudden cyclones frequently wash away months of intensive labour, leaving families in mounting debt. Despite providing an essential global commodity, these workers earn three percent of the salt's final value, living without running water or basic sanitation.

Hope emerges through innovation and activism. Scientists at the Central Salt and Marine Chemical Research Institute are introducing new types of pan linings and solar-powered pumps to reduce costs and increase yields. Activists like Pankti Jog fight for land rights, healthcare and education, establishing mobile schools in old buses for the next generation. Yet, the future remains a gamble. While some children dream of becoming teachers or police officers, many feel tethered to the salt by heritage and lack of choice.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

BBC Sounds, Music, Radio, podcasts.

0:11.1

Hello from the run of kutch, a vast desert in India's Gujarat.

0:16.5

This region of saline soil is responsible for 75% of India's salt production.

0:22.9

The run of kutch isn't a sandy dry desert.

0:25.5

It's a salt marsh desert.

0:27.6

It's hot and quite humid.

0:29.9

Summer temperatures can reach 50 degrees Celsius.

0:34.1

The run of kutch is special because it's a remnant of the Arabian Sea.

0:38.4

When it rains during the monsoon, water collects and turns it into a seasonal wetland.

0:44.4

When the water recedes or evaporates, the salt deposits remain.

0:48.7

Now we are entering into the little run of Kaj.

0:52.1

It is the start of the run area.

0:55.7

I'm driving into the run with a guide from the Committee for Agarria Rights Protection.

1:00.9

We're off to meet Jagdish.

1:02.5

He's an agarria, a traditional salt farmer.

1:05.5

These families have been harvesting salt here since the 16th century.

1:10.0

My name is Jagdish. I'm 30 years old. We are agarayas. I live here with my wife,

1:16.7

my father and mother, my uncle and my daughter. We are all agarias.

1:21.4

Jagdish is one of 4,300 agarias here in the desert. Agarias are a small population of nomadic tribal families who migrate to

1:30.3

these salt flats for eight months of the year to farm salt on small holdings. We're chatting by

1:37.3

Jagdisha's salt pans and we've taken shelter from the heat in the only shade around here for miles

1:43.2

under his solar panels.

...

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