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Indian Dairy News

17 High-Genetic US Bulls Arrive to Boost Kashmir Dairy
Mar 13, 2026

17 High-Genetic US Bulls Arrive to Boost Kashmir Dairy

In a major step to strengthen dairy productivity, the Animal Husbandry Department (AHD) of Jammu & Kashmir has imported 17 high-genetic-merit dairy bulls from the United States as part of a breeding i...Read More

Jigawa to Partner India for Dairy Development
Mar 13, 2026

Jigawa to Partner India for Dairy Development

The Jigawa State Government in Nigeria has announced plans to collaborate with the National Dairy Development Board (NDDB) of India to promote livestock development and expand dairy production in the...Read More

Scientific Breeding Boosts Gujarat Dairy Incomes
Mar 13, 2026

Scientific Breeding Boosts Gujarat Dairy Incomes

A 63-year-old artificial insemination (AI) specialist, Deepak Patel, from Vaheval village in Gujarat, is helping strengthen the dairy economy by promoting scientific breeding techniques that improve c...Read More

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Rajahmundry Milk Incident: Accident or Adulteration?
Mar 10, 2026

Rajahmundry Milk Incident: Accident or Adulteration?

The recent editorial “Bitter Milk” published by The Hindu raises important concerns about food safety in India. The editorial deserves appreciation for attempting to broaden the conversation and under...Read More

Milk Prices Rise in South & West: Is North Next?
Mar 05, 2026

Milk Prices Rise in South & West: Is North Next?

The recent round of retail milk price increases across South India and Maharashtra is no longer an episodic adjustment but a clear signal of structural stress building up in India’s milk economy. Over...Read More

India’s Dairy Climate Paradox: Production Triumph Meets Methane Time-Bomb
Mar 02, 2026

India’s Dairy Climate Paradox: Production Triumph Meets Methane Time-Bomb

India’s rise to the top of the global dairy league board has been one of the most remarkable agricultural success stories of the 21st century. With milk production surpassing 247 million tonnes per ye...Read More

India’s First Cow Culture Museum in Mathura
Feb 16, 2026

India’s First Cow Culture Museum in Mathura

India’s first national “Cow Culture Museum” is set to be established in Mathura, Uttar Pradesh, on the campus of Pandit Deendayal Upadhyaya Veterinary Science University, announced the Uttar Pradesh B...Read More

Global Dairy News

Lactose-Free Milk Seen as Growth Driver in Coffee
Mar 13, 2026

Lactose-Free Milk Seen as Growth Driver in Coffee

Lactose-free milk is emerging as a major growth opportunity for the dairy industry, particularly in the rapidly expanding coffee and café segment. A recent US-based study highlighted that lactose-free...Read More

Nigeria’s Dairy Challenge: Many Cows, Little Milk
Mar 13, 2026

Nigeria’s Dairy Challenge: Many Cows, Little Milk

Despite having more than 20 million cattle, Nigeria produces far less milk than it consumes, highlighting deep structural challenges in its dairy sector. Most cattle in the country are...Read More

Israel Drops Controversial Dairy Reform From Budget
Mar 12, 2026

Israel Drops Controversial Dairy Reform From Budget

The Israeli government has removed a controversial dairy reform proposed by Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich from the 2026 Arrangements Law, a key legislative package linked to the country’s state bu...Read More

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Justice delayed is justice denied; Why delay the law to protect milk label ?

By Kuldeep Sharma•Published on June 02, 2021

Justice delayed is justice denied; Why delay the law to protect milk label ?
Prefer on

Milk is the first food for life. The integrity of milk labels is under threat today. This *protection of the integrity of milk and dairy is vital* . In a changing business environment the production and placement on the market of imitations can pose potential health risks for consumers. There has been quite some delay by the food regulator FSSAI in India to enact the law for protecting the integrity of milk labels. This is a benign injustice to 100 millions small and marginal dairy farmers as well as 1.3 billions dairy consumers in India.

Delayed justice always bears a cost. Currently that cost is borne by none other than the poor small and marginal farmers associated with dairy farming. The problem doesn’t end here . The dairy processors have made huge investments to ensure smooth supply of milk and products to the market. There is a huge eco system of stakeholders from the private and public sector also which is at stake due to this delay.

Also read : Cheese will no more be Cheezzy : FSSAI amends regulation on analogues and testing of ghee purity

Currently the plant based dairy products industry is taking the generic dairy industry heads on. They are doing it by publicising the false notion of dairy being bad as it is an outcome of cow cruelty. The frame of reference being considered by so called social organisations is utterly from a western context of dairy farming. Commercial dairy farming has a dual dimension of dairy and beef in the western world. The farmers keep the animals for 2-3 lactation cycles only for dairy purpose.

Cow is part of a farmer’s family

In Indian culture a cow is an eternal part of a farmer’s family. There is no counting of the number of lactations that animals spend in the backyard of an Indian farmer. The ban on cow slaughter in India resolves any further doubt on mishandling of this sacred animal in an Indian context.

Also read : Amul campaigns to bust “myths” about non-dairy beverages

The natural origin, nutritional value, functional properties and sensory characteristics of milk and milk products have created a uniquely positive consumer perception. This also is helpful in creating a strong market position of milk and milk products all over the world.

Codex Alimentarius adopted the The Codex general standard for the use of Dairy terms (GSUDT) in 1999. The mandate was to ensure the correct use of dairy terms intended for milk and milk products. The same also ensured fair practices in the food trade . The purpose was to avoid any confusion or misleading of consumers by the use of dairy terms on non-dairy-products.

GSUDT Rules

The clear rules as laid down in the GSUDT *provide an internationally accepted framework to protect the integrity of milk and milk products against nutritionally inferior imitation products that attempt to take advantage of the natural and healthy image of milk and milk products*. Its application assists consumers all over the world in making their own purchasing decisions regarding milk products versus non-milk products and it ensures fair practices in the food trade.

Also read : PETA India advises Amul to switch to producing creamy dairy-free milk

Codex Alimentarius under GSUDT has given two simple definitions for the milk and milk products as given below. So where is the confusion on this? What’s wrong in calling milk and milk products by the names which are generic and popular ? What’s wrong is restricting all other food products not matching the criteria to be known by some other names? We have not seen any authority banning the production of any such analogue products. The regulation is not about banning them. It is only about ethics and integrity of an age old traditional range of food products.

Definitions as per GSDUT for milk and milk products

Dairy terms augment analogues more than their intrinsic nutritional power

It seems that the dairy nomenclature gives an easy route to these plant based derivatives in the consumer minds. They wish to piggyback the benefits of strong positioning of dairy products by introducing their less nutritional analogues products. There are 3 key questions to be answered at this stage ?
  1. If milk and milk products are so bad then why do they name their plant-based and cell-based laboratory-made products with dairy terms ?
  2. Why don’t they be innovative enough in coining new nomenclature for their dairy-like products eg in categories of milk, cheese, yogurts, ice-cream etc ?
  3. If their products are so nutritional then why don’t they let the consumer decide on what is good for them without talking negative about a generic industry ?
Also read : NCDFI asks Delhi HC about mislabelling of plant based products as milk

I think it is a right time for the regulator FSSAI to enact the law related to analogues. The draft notification for the same was released in July 2020. The law will also be giving an opportunity for all dairy processors to use a logo to simplify consumer-choice-process. At the end, the menace of use of veg-oil in ghee, paneer, khoa and cheese with or without declaration would also be contained well.

A Blog by Kuldeep Sharma Chief editor , Dairynews7x7

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