We Didn't Start With Honey. We Started With a Dream to Protect Bees.
From One Hive to a Movement
Bee Active began with a simple question:
"What if beekeeping could create a better future for both people and nature?"
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What started as a small passion for bees soon became a mission to protect pollinators, support farmers, and reconnect communities with the natural world.
Our journey has taken us from managing a handful of hives to working with farmers, educational institutions, farmhouses, urban gardens, and conservation projects across India. Along the way, we discovered that bees are far more than honey producers—they are silent partners in food production, biodiversity, and ecological balance.
Today, Bee Active is building a network of beekeepers, environmental stewards, and nature lovers who believe that every hive can make a difference. Through sustainable beekeeping, pollination services, honey production, bee rescue operations, mushroom cultivation, training programs, and community outreach, we continue to create positive impact one colony at a time.
Because when bees thrive, nature thrives. And when nature thrives, we
Our Team
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Sandip
Ananya
Biswajit
Beauty
We work through every aspect at the planning
Current Challenges Facing Native Bees in India
- The invasive Small Hive Beetle (SHB) was first detected in West Bengal and has since spread to multiple beekeeping regions in India. Researchers reported colony losses ranging from 8% to 98% in affected apiaries in West Bengal.
- SHB was initially detected in North 24 Parganas, West Bengal, during surveys conducted in 2022 and later spread to other districts.
- Scientists and beekeepers across India have raised concerns about increasing pressures from pests, diseases, habitat loss, pesticide exposure, and climate variability affecting honey bee populations.
Protecting India's Native Pollinators
Bee Active was founded with a simple but urgent mission: to protect India's native bees and restore healthy ecosystems.
Over the past decade, beekeepers across the country have witnessed increasing challenges, including habitat loss, pesticide exposure, climate change, and the emergence of invasive pests such as the Small Hive Beetle. These threats have placed unprecedented pressure on both managed and wild bee populations.
Our field observations indicate a significant decline in healthy native bee colonies across many regions of Eastern India. This inspired us to focus our work on the conservation and promotion of indigenous species such as Apis cerana indica and stingless bees (Meliponini).
Rather than simply producing honey, our goal is to create resilient pollinator ecosystems that support biodiversity, food security, and sustainable agriculture for future generations.