Dairy Dimension

India’s Dairy Sector at a Crossroads: Policy Imperatives for the Next Leap

India’s dairy industry remains a cornerstone of national nutrition, rural income generation, and economic resilience. As the world’s largest milk producer—contributing nearly 25% of the global milk supply—India has not only expanded production volumes but also achieved impressive gains in per-animal productivity, cooperative and institutional depth. Yet, the next phase of growth depends critically on executing policy reforms at scale, particularly in breeding, infrastructure, traceability, and sustainability.

Unprecedented Growth, Uneven Outcomes

Milk production in India surged from 146.3 million tonnes in 2014–15 to 239.3 million tonnes in 2023–24, marking a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of around 5.7%. This has pushed per-capita milk availability to 471 grams per day—well above the global average of approximately 322 grams. Notably, India’s 27.4% increase in bovine productivity over the past decade is the fastest among major dairy-producing nations.

However, the impressive growth masks underlying disparities. While Western and Northern states lead in productivity and infrastructure, the Eastern and Northeastern regions continue to lag in both yield and per-capita availability. Addressing this regional imbalance remains a key policy challenge.

What’s Powering the Dairy Engine?

Genetic Gains & Technology Adoption

India’s aggressive push for genetic upgradation is yielding results. With over 565 lakh artificial inseminations (AI) projected for 2024–25, the use of sex-sorted semen, IVF, and embryo transfer (ET) technologies is accelerating the quality of dairy herds. The revamped Rashtriya Gokul Mission supports this effort by investing in high-quality semen stations, bull mother farms, genomic tools, and scientific rearing of heifers.

Institutional Infrastructure & Cooperative

The dairy cooperative spans 22 state federations and 241 unions, reaching nearly 2.35 lakh villages and over 1.72 crore members. This structure ensures efficient procurement, quality assurance, and the inclusion of farmers. Programmes such as the National Programme for Dairy Development (NPDD), the Dairy Processing and Infrastructure Development Fund (DIDF), and the Animal Husbandry Infrastructure Development Fund (AHIDF) are upgrading village-level chilling units, testing laboratories, and processing facilities.

Women at the Forefront

Nearly 70% of on-farm labour in the dairy sector is performed by women. With more than 48,000 women-led dairy cooperatives participating in Milk Producer Organisations (MPOs), women’s leadership is becoming increasingly central to the sector’s governance and its impact on livelihoods.

White Revolution 2.0: A Blueprint for Transformation

The government’s ambitious five-year plan (2024–29) under White Revolution 2.0 seeks to establish 75,000 new Dairy Cooperatives (DCS) and strengthen over 46,000 existing ones. It also introduces a circular economy focus by encouraging the production of organic manure, biogas units, and sustainable fodder systems.


Bridging the Gaps: Where Policy Must Focus

Despite progress, significant execution gaps persist:


Strategic Policy Recommendations for 2025–29

1. Scale Up Artificial Insemination

2. Bridge the Regional Divide

3. Make Quality and Traceability the Default

4. Enable Circular and Climate-Smart Dairying

5. Stabilise Market Risks

6. Digitise Advisory and Monitoring Systems


Vision 2029: What Success Looks Like

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