India DDGS Market to Reach $5 Billion by 2035
India’s Distillers Dried Grains with Solubles (DDGS) market — a nutrient-rich co-product of grain-based ethanol production increasingly used in animal feed — is poised for rapid expansion over the next decade, according to a recent Market Research Future report. The sector, currently valued at around USD 2,500 million in 2024, is forecast to nearly double to USD 5,000 million by 2035, growing at a steady compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 6.5% between 2025 and 2035 as feed markets and ethanol production expand.
This growth trajectory reflects the broader impact of India’s ambitious ethanol blending programme and livestock feed demand, which together create structural support for DDGS adoption. DDGS are emerging as cost-effective, high-energy and protein-rich alternatives to traditional feed ingredients such as soybean meal and maize, particularly in poultry, dairy and aquaculture rations — sectors that are themselves growing robustly as consumer demand for animal-derived foods rises. The drive toward E20 ethanol blending by 2025-26 has stimulated grain-based ethanol capacity, underpinning DDGS supply while also bolstering regional feed markets.
The market report notes that producers are responding to demand with diversified DDGS types — including corn, wheat, rice and blended grain variants — and formats such as pellets, powder and granules to suit different livestock nutrition needs. Protein segmentation (below 35 %, 35–50 %, and above 60 %) also allows feed formulators to tailor blends to species-specific requirements. This diversification, combined with expected improvements in processing technologies and quality assurance, is likely to enhance DDGS acceptance among premium feed manufacturers and support export potential to neighbouring Asian and Middle Eastern feed markets.
At the same time, the expanding DDGS market has wider implications for India’s feed sector. In addition to offering feed cost advantages, abundant DDGS supply is already reshaping domestic ingredient demand — in some cases displacing traditional protein meals like soybean and rapeseed meal — and exerting downward pressure on their prices. Exports of DDGS have also shown exponential growth in recent years, with maize and rice DDGS shipments climbing sharply as producers seek price-sensitive buyers in Vietnam, Malaysia and other Asian destinations.
Looking ahead, the projected expansion to USD 5 billion by 2035 underscores DDGS as a strategic pillar of India’s evolving livestock and feed economy, driven by ethanol policy, cost-effective nutrition and emerging export opportunities. For Indian dairy and livestock integrators, this expanding DDGS ecosystem presents both a supply opportunity and a feed cost management lever that could help sustain competitive margins as input prices fluctuate and global nutrition demand continues to grow.
Source : Dairynews7x7 Dec 18th 2025 Read full story here









