Hoshiarpur Farmer Turns Surplus Milk into ₹1 Cr Dairy Venture
In a remarkable journey of transformation, a smallholder dairy farmer from Mawa Kaholan village (Una district, Himachal Pradesh) has built a thriving farm-to-consumer dairy enterprise in Hoshiarpur, Punjab, turning surplus milk into a profitable and scaled business under the brand “Farm Fresh Safe Food.” What began as a modest dairy operation has now expanded into a diversified agri-business that exemplifies both value addition and entrepreneurial resilience in India’s evolving dairy landscape.
Every morning, dairy entrepreneur Kahol personally delivers around 2.5 quintals of milk and about 50 kg of processed dairy products — including curd, paneer, butter and lassi — to a dedicated city selling point in Hoshiarpur. Sales begin at 7:30 am and are typically completed within 30 minutes, largely driven by strong demand from a WhatsApp group of nearly 100 regular customers and supplemental evening home deliveries.
Under Kahol’s leadership, the family has grown its herd from 10 cows to around 30, with 15–16 cows in milk at any given time. Their value-added product pricing reflects premium positioning in the local market — milk at ₹70/kg, curd at ₹120/kg, paneer at ₹600/kg, lassi at ₹60/kg, and butter at ₹1,000/kg. On a daily basis, the enterprise turns over nearly three quintals of milk and dairy products worth ₹27,000–₹30,000, translating into monthly revenue of ₹8–9 lakh with an estimated profit margin of around 30 per cent.
The diversification extends well beyond dairy alone. Kahol’s farm integrates vegetable cultivation and fruit processing, with about 42 fruit trees — including mango, amla, apple, lemon, anjeer and guava — being processed into pickles, murabbas, candies and powders. Seasonal vegetables contribute additional daily income of about ₹2,000–₹3,000 during peak periods, and turmeric grown on the farm is sold either raw or as pickles.
Kahol’s success story illustrates how vertical integration and direct-to-consumer engagement can unlock higher value in dairy and allied agribusiness. Moving beyond commodity sales to branded value-added products, strong customer relationships and a diversified farm ecosystem has propelled annual revenues to over ₹1 crore, a dramatic leap from earlier subsistence-level earnings.
His efforts have also gained institutional recognition: the Punjab Agricultural University (PAU) honoured Kahol this year with the Sardar Surjit Singh Dhillon Award for Self-Cultivating Small Farmers under its “Process your own produce and earn profits” initiative. This accolade reflects a broader push to encourage value addition and entrepreneurship among smallholder farmers — a critical piece of India’s dairy sector evolution as the market shifts toward quality, traceability and differentiated products.
Source : Dairynews7x7 DEc 222nd 2025 Read full story here










