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GDT 396: Dairy Prices Rally Again After Nine DropsHatsun 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% Growth

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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5 Year Budget Plan to Make Indian Dairy Global Leader in 2047
Jan 15, 2026

5 Year Budget Plan to Make Indian Dairy Global Leader in 2047

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

From Forecast to Fact: 2025 Lessons, 2026 Dairy Outlook

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

India–NZ Dairy FTA: Safeguards or Silent Slippages?
Dec 26, 2025

India–NZ Dairy FTA: Safeguards or Silent Slippages?

The recently concluded India–New Zealand Free Trade Agreement (FTA) marks an important milestone in bilateral trade, while carefully ring-fencing India’s sensitive dairy sector. Under the agreement, c...Read More

Vision 2047: India’s Dairy Development Roadmap
Dec 21, 2025

Vision 2047: India’s Dairy Development Roadmap

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

GDT 396: Dairy Prices Rally Again After Nine Drops
Jan 20, 2026

GDT 396: Dairy Prices Rally Again After Nine Drops

The 396th Global Dairy Trade (GDT) auction — the second dairy trading event of 2026 — delivered a second consecutive rise in global dairy prices, with the GDT Price Index increasing by 1.5 % to 1,088...Read More

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

High-Oleic Soybeans Could Transform Dairy Feed & Milk Quality
Jan 19, 2026

High-Oleic Soybeans Could Transform Dairy Feed & Milk Quality

New research shows that feeding high-oleic soybeans to dairy cows can both improve milk composition and cut feed costs, offering a promising feed strategy for producers amid rising input prices. This...Read More

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PM Modi lauds contribution of dairy farming in the Farmer’s Income

By DairyNews7x7•Published on February 09, 2021

Prime Minister Narendra Modi made some pertinent points on the much-needed farm reforms and did well by mentioning the contribution of dairy farming. In his Rajya Sabha address on Monday, he said: “The contribution of dairy farming is over 28 per cent in the agricultural market in India. Its trade is worth Rs 8-lakh crore. The value of milk is both higher than food grains and pulses combined together.”

This has to be seen in light of the government’s attempts to improve rural incomes. But how to increase the rural income should be the focus. The government data paints a dismal picture as it reveals the growth of income through cultivation to be 3 per cent and through animal husbandry 14 per cent. The per capita income in the village is Rs 6,500. All these figures come in the backdrop of the government’s efforts in doubling farmer’s income. Once the income is doubled, it will lead to growth opportunities.

Animal Husbandry sector

Now when we come to the dairy/animal husbandry sector, we find that it contributes 28 per cent to the agriculture GDP and 4.5 per cent to the national GDP. But the agriculture contribution to the GDP is reducing day by day. At the time of Independence, it was 50 per cent and it is just 15 per cent now. It shows that the agriculture cultivation is going down, while the animal husbandry is going up. (Animal husbandry is Rs 11-lakh crore and the diary is Rs 8-lakh crore). With this, we see that dairy value is more than the combined price of wheat, paddy and sugarcane, where the Minimum Support Price (MSP) is there. In the milk sector, there is no MSP.

Next, we see that in the agriculture cultivation, only landowner farmers are involved, and in dairy, more than 80 per cent of landless and marginal farmers are involved.

The three farm reform measures taken by the government enable the farmers to sell their produce freely to anybody, anywhere and at any price. The industry was liberalised in 1991 and the dairy industry was liberalised in 1992. Although even before that farmers were free to sell their produce to anybody, there were restrictions on the investments by the private sector under certain categories.

Growth in the dairy sector

If you see the dairy industry, its growth in production in the last ten years is more than 6 per cent, which is three times more than the increase in world milk production. In the case of milk, neither we are surplus nor deficit, we produce what we consume. Where in the case of wheat, paddy and sugarcane, we have got surplus but no opportunity for exports. We have a deficit for pulses and edible oil and we are importing Rs 75,000 crore worth of edible oil and Rs 10,000 crore worth of pulses. So the intention of farm bills is to free farmers like industry and animal husbandry and dairy farmers.

We need to divert our agriculture from domestic surplus (wheat, paddy and sugarcane) to import substitution (edible oil and pulses).

Agriculture farmers who are mainly landowners get subsidies like fertilisers, power, seed, crop insurance subsidy, etc. worth Rs 2,15,000,00 per annum as said in the latest Union Budget. On the other hand, the animal husbandry gets only Rs 3,500 crore, (1.5 per cent of the agriculture budget).

APMC versus milk cooperatives

Also, I would like to share that in the case of agriculture, there are 6,000 to 7,000 APMCs and for the milk sector, there are more than 3 lakh mandis in 6,000 villages. So we see that with the corporates, there is competition based on their supply chain efficiency.

I feel that if the government can encourage more MSMEs to enter into buying and aggregating agriculture crops at the village level, this apprehension of the bigger industries monopolising the purchase can be addressed.

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