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Hatsun Agro Q3: Revenue, net profit surgeIndia Slaps 30% Duty on US Pulses; Trade Talks Feel StrainHigh-Oleic Soybeans Could Transform Dairy Feed & Milk QualityAmul Dairy Records ₹14,099 Cr Turnover, 9.2% GrowthHi-Tech dairy plant to be commissioned in Namakkal in February

Indian Dairy News

Hatsun Agro Q3: Revenue, net profit surge
Jan 19, 2026

Hatsun Agro Q3: Revenue, net profit surge

Dairy products maker Hatsun Agro Products Ltd. on Monday, January 19, reported a 48% year-on-year (YoY) growth in net profit to ₹60.6 crore for the quarter ended December 31, 2025. Net profit for the...Read More

Amul Dairy Records ₹14,099 Cr Turnover, 9.2% Growth
Jan 19, 2026

Amul Dairy Records ₹14,099 Cr Turnover, 9.2% Growth

The Kaira District Cooperative Milk Producers’ Union Ltd (Amul Dairy) reported a turnover of ₹14,099 crore in FY25, marking a 9.2 % year-on-year growth, according to figures announced at its 79th Annu...Read More

Hi-Tech dairy plant to be commissioned in Namakkal in February
Jan 19, 2026

Hi-Tech dairy plant to be commissioned in Namakkal in February

A hi-tech dairy plant, that is upcoming in Namakkal at a cost of ₹89.28 crore, will be commissioned next month (February) and the trial run of the plant has begun. The Namakkal Aavin that was bifur...Read More

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I recently moderated a key session on India Dairy Vision 2047 at the TPCI's International Dairy Processing Conference 2026, gaining valuable insights from panellists. This led to me developing policy...Read More

From Forecast to Fact: 2025 Lessons, 2026 Dairy Outlook
Jan 01, 2026

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As we step into 2026, it is worth pausing to reflect on how the Indian dairy sector navigated the challenges of 2025 and how closely reality tracked the forecasts I outlined in the first blog of last...Read More

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As India moves steadily toward Vision 2047, the dairy sector stands at a strategic inflection point. From being a food security instrument in the decades following Independence, dairy has evolved into...Read More

Global Dairy News

India Slaps 30% Duty on US Pulses; Trade Talks Feel Strain
Jan 19, 2026

India Slaps 30% Duty on US Pulses; Trade Talks Feel Strain

India has quietly imposed a 30 % tariff on pulses imported from the United States — including key crops like yellow peas and lentils — in what officials present as a protective trade measure for domes...Read More

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High-Oleic Soybeans Could Transform Dairy Feed & Milk Quality

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The Dairy Protein Value Index posted a modest decline in mid-December, highlighting subtle but meaningful shifts in South American dairy exports that continue to shape global protein markets — includi...Read More

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Natural’s Ice creams flared 26 Tons of Ice cream as a responsible gesture

By DairyNews7x7•Published on August 08, 2020

Maharashtra state government was the first one to announce lockdown from March 19th onwards. In rest of India lockdown begun on March 25th. Early lockdown caught the team of Natural’s ice cream Mumbai completely off guard . The team was optimizing its production as well as distribution to clear up their stocks . But the suddenness of the announcement meant they did not know what to do with the ice-cream that had already been manufactured.

The first management decision at Naturals was to check if they could give away the ice-creams to the poor before they expired. They reached out to BMC  and the local police. But, the first phase of lockdown saw strict implementation and there was lack of clarity over vehicular movements.

Natural’s is doing responsible business

“It was not like 10 kgs of sample we’d dispose of through wet waste managers of municipality. 26 tonnes of ice-cream can not be disposed off in a normal drain. The ice-cream which has so much of protein, lactose ,sugar and fat will choke the gutter. We did not want to put it in a landfill also We wanted to work with someone who could do justice to both these items,” says Naik, VP supply chain.

Natural’s finally decided to reach out to Sanjeevani S3, one of the rare wet disposal plants in Mumbai. Located in the Malad (W), Sanjeevani S3 sees 2,000 kgs of wet waste disposal every day.

Sanjeevani S# first asked Naturals to first send them a small quantities of ice-cream for taking trials.. It typically takes about 24 hours for the waste to be converted into gas. A percentage of the waste also gets converted into compost. A combination of bacteria in our digester converts the ice-cream into gas and compost. Compost typically constitutes 10% of the end product. But since there’s nothing solid in ice-creams, very little compost gets produced. Most of the ice-cream gets converted into gas.

Technology of waste to wealth

“The gas constant, or the amount of gas produced, is around 100-110m3 per tonne for normal wet waste. But with ice-cream 220-250m3 per tonne of gas was produced. As per Sanjivani, it’s a very good substrate for biogas plant. The whole process of converting 26 Tons of Ice cream into gas took 40 days.

“It takes time for microbes to consume oil and fat. We asked Naturals two days’ gap per week so that our microbes consume could recover after consuming the extra fat,” says Zulkif. So, the entire process of getting rid of the 26 tonnes of ice-cream took Sanjeevani S3 and Naturals more than 40 days.

Sanjivani did not have capacity to bottle methane gas as cooking gas or convert gas into electrcity. Had the facility been even more advanced, it could have powered 30 homes in any slum of North Mumbai for a month.

This gas could have been converted into electricity also. 100m3 gas is equivalent to two-and-a-half LPG cylinders. The 26 tonnes of ice-cream was converted into approximately 52,000m3 methane which was flared up in open.In other words , that would equal to 1,040 gas cylinders or 6,240 units of electricity. This wastage could have been monetised better in the presence of required infrastructure.

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