Summer Heat to Stress India’s Dairy Cold Chain

India’s dairy industry could face a major operational test this summer as rising temperatures and growing demand for chilled dairy products put increasing pressure on the country’s cold-chain infrastructure. Industry experts note that above-normal temperatures and longer heat spells are expected across many regions, raising the risk of spoilage and logistical challenges across the dairy supply chain.
At the same time, India’s dairy market is undergoing a structural shift from loose milk to packaged, branded and value-added products such as curd, buttermilk, lassi, flavoured milk, fresh paneer and ice cream, which require continuous refrigeration from production to retail shelves. The dairy cold chain begins at village-level milk aggregation and bulk milk chilling centres, then moves through refrigerated transport, storage depots and finally retail chillers, making it highly sensitive to power disruptions and infrastructure gaps.
Even brief electricity interruptions in rural areas can affect milk chilling and food safety, highlighting the importance of reliable power supply and efficient last-mile distribution. Analysts say the biggest challenge is not weak demand but the fact that consumption growth in fresh and fermented dairy products is outpacing existing chilling infrastructure, especially at the retail level in semi-urban and rural markets.
As a result, the upcoming summer could reveal which dairy companies have invested sufficiently in village-level chilling, distribution discipline and cold-chain management, potentially giving them a competitive advantage in India’s rapidly evolving dairy market.
Source: Dairynews7x7 11th March, 2026 Get full story here
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