A new colour is flooding India’s beverage market: electric blue. Not from synthetic dyes but from the petals of the butterfly pea flower, a plant long used in traditional medicine and now rebranded as ‘blue gold’. The shift is subtle but significant: street vendors in Mumbai now serve ‘neelam chai’ alongside chai, while upscale bars in Delhi offer cocktails that shift from indigo to violet with a squeeze of lime. This is more than a trend. It is a quiet economic revolution with global implications.
The butterfly pea flower, or Clitoria ternatea, grows abundantly across tropical Asia. In India, it thrives with minimal water and labour, making it an ideal crop for small farmers. Until recently, its primary use was as a hair rinse or an ingredient in temple offerings. Then came the wellness boom. Instagram-friendly beverages, caffeine-free herbal infusions and natural colourants caught the eye of health-conscious consumers. Suddenly, demand surged. India’s domestic market for butterfly pea flower products has grown by over 300 per cent in three years, according to industry estimates. Now British trade officials are watching.
Earlier this week, a delegation from the UK’s Department for Business and Trade visited farms in Kerala and Karnataka to assess supply chains. The reason is obvious: Britain’s booming market for functional beverages. The UK imports over £2 billion worth of tea and herbal infusions annually, and the butterfly pea flower fits neatly into the premium wellness niche. Rich in anthocyanins (antioxidants that give it that vivid hue) and linked to improved skin, hair and cognitive function, it is the sort of ‘superfood’ that British shoppers lap up. But the real prize is not just dried petals. It is the extract, the concentrate and the ready-to-drink formulations that command higher margins.
For the Indian farmer, this represents an opportunity to move from subsistence to scale. Butterfly pea flowers can be harvested multiple times a year, and processing facilities are beginning to spring up in Coimbatore and Hyderabad. Yet there are risks. Rapid commodification could squeeze margins, as it has with quinoa and acai. Local communities fear that once British buyers standardise their supply chains, the ‘blue gold’ will enrich middlemen and multinationals rather than the women who pick the petals at dawn.
On the streets, the change is palpable. In Jaipur, a tea seller named Rajesh Sharma told me his butterfly pea tea now accounts for a third of his sales. ‘The youth want something new,’ he said. ‘They take photos of the colour change. It’s become a symbol of being modern.’ Meanwhile, in London’s Borough Market, a stall selling Indian blue tea draws long queues. The cultural shift is that a humble flower, once overlooked, is now a marker of sophistication and wellness on two continents.
The British trade officials are right to be interested. But the real story is not about export volumes or trade balances. It is about how a single plant can alter livelihoods, tastes and perceptions. Whether ‘blue gold’ becomes a lasting industry or a passing fad depends on whether the benefits flow back to the fields. For now, India’s tea gardens are turning blue. And the world is watching.








