Bargarh

Bargarh
Ricebowl of Odisha/City Of Handloom
Town
From Top Left: Debrigarh Wildlife Sanctuary, Nrusinghanath stream, Drone view of Bargarh Town during Dhanujatra, Bargarh Railway Station, Lord Krishna Statue, VSS Statue, Aapkhol Waterfall
From Top Left:

Debrigarh Wildlife Sanctuary, Nrusinghanath stream, Drone view of Bargarh Town during Dhanujatra, Bargarh Railway Station, Lord Krishna Statue,

VSS Statue, Aapkhol Waterfall
Nickname: 
ଭାତହାଣ୍ଡି Bhatahandi
Bargarh is located in Odisha
Bargarh
Bargarh
Location in Odisha, India
Bargarh is located in India
Bargarh
Bargarh
Bargarh (India)
Coordinates: 21°20′N 83°37′E / 21.333°N 83.617°E / 21.333; 83.617
Country India
State Odisha
DistrictBargarh district
Government
 • TypeMunicipality
 • BodyBargarh Municipality
 • Member of ParliamentPradip Purohit (BJP)
 • Member of Legislative AssemblyAswini Sarangi (BJP)
Elevation
171 m (561 ft)
Population
 (2011)[1]
80,625
 • Rank13(in Odisha)
 • Density38,762/km2 (100,390/sq mi)
DemonymBargadia
Languages
 • OfficialOdia English
 • LocalSambalpuri
Time zoneUTC+5:30 (IST)
PIN
768028
Vehicle registrationOD-17
Websitehttp://bargarh.nic.in

Bargarh is one of the major towns of Western Odisha and a municipality in Bargarh district in the state of Odisha in India. It is the administrative headquarters of Bargarh District and is one of the most important towns of Odisha because it is known as the "rice bowl of Odisha" due to its intense rice production, it is a agroindustrial hub and is also known as "city of handloom" because sambalpuri sari originated from here."Dhanujatra" of Bargarh is world famous and is known as the "world's largest open theatre". Bargarh was awarded with the "fastest moving city" award under the 50k-100k category in Swachh Sarbekhyan 2022 in the east zone.


BPCL’s first integrated 2G+1G BioEthanol refinery at Bargarh, Odisha is scheduled for mechanical completion . This will be using biomass from non-edible whole plants or food grain residues for 2G ethanol and sugarcane juice, molasses & damaged grains for making 1G ethanol.[2]

  1. ^ [1] Archived 4 March 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ "BPCL Stories".