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DDGS is allowed instead of Maize and Soya in India US FTAGenetics Boost Cow Longevity, Profitability in Dairy HerdsAnaerobic digestion could cut dairy carbon footprint by 20%India–US Trade Deal Tussle: Dairy’s “Non-Veg Milk” Sticking PointFAO Food Price Index declines in January for fifth consecutive month

Indian Dairy News

DDGS is allowed instead of Maize and Soya in India US FTA
Feb 08, 2026

DDGS is allowed instead of Maize and Soya in India US FTA

Written by: Harish Damodaran India has agreed to grant greater market access through elimination or reduction of tariffs for some American farm produce.  India has not opened up its market to im...Read More

Andhra CM Alleges ‘Bathroom-Cleaner Chemical’ Ghee in Tirupati Laddus
Feb 07, 2026

Andhra CM Alleges ‘Bathroom-Cleaner Chemical’ Ghee in Tirupati Laddus

Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister N. Chandrababu Naidu has sparked fresh controversy by alleging that during the tenure of the previous YSRCP government, the iconic Tirupati laddus — sacred prasada...Read More

Parag Milk Foods Q3 profit down 13 pc to Rs 33 cr
Feb 06, 2026

Parag Milk Foods Q3 profit down 13 pc to Rs 33 cr

Parag Milk Foods Ltd on Thursday posted a 13.51 per cent drop in consolidated net profit at Rs 32.57 crore for the third quarter of the 2025-26 fiscal on higher expenses. The company had clocked a ne...Read More

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Budget 2026: Highest Allocation Ever, Yet Dairy Farmers Still Wait
Feb 02, 2026

Budget 2026: Highest Allocation Ever, Yet Dairy Farmers Still Wait

As Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman presented the Union Budget 2026–27 in Parliament on 1 February 2026, the government reiterated its commitment to agriculture and allied sectors — including anima...Read More

How a fridge could unlock modern dairy cattle breeding
Jan 31, 2026

How a fridge could unlock modern dairy cattle breeding

A Hiroshima University-led project has secured a $1.8 million grant from the Gates Foundation to develop a way to store bull semen using simple refrigeration instead of costly liquid nitrogen, a shi...Read More

Economic Survey 2026: Why Dairy Holds the Key to Farm Incomes
Jan 31, 2026

Economic Survey 2026: Why Dairy Holds the Key to Farm Incomes

The Economic Survey 2025–26 quietly but clearly reinforces a reality that those working closely with rural India already know: dairy is no longer just a subsidiary activity to agriculture, it is the b...Read More

Two Stocks Powering India's Rs 1-Lakh-Crore Protein Boom
Jan 21, 2026

Two Stocks Powering India's Rs 1-Lakh-Crore Protein Boom

Protein consumption in India is moving beyond supplements and fitness products into daily food choices. Awareness around nutrition has increased, but intake remains uneven. Parag Milk Foods Ltd. estim...Read More

Global Dairy News

Genetics Boost Cow Longevity, Profitability in Dairy Herds
Feb 08, 2026

Genetics Boost Cow Longevity, Profitability in Dairy Herds

Advances in genetic selection are helping dairy farmers extend the productive life of their cows, with new research and breeding tools showing that longevity can be improved alongside key production t...Read More

Anaerobic digestion could cut dairy carbon footprint by 20%
Feb 08, 2026

Anaerobic digestion could cut dairy carbon footprint by 20%

Combining continuous crop cover with anaerobic digestion of manure and biomass could significantly reduce greenhouse gas emissions from dairy farming, though researchers warn careful management is nee...Read More

India–US Trade Deal Tussle: Dairy’s “Non-Veg Milk” Sticking Point
Feb 07, 2026

India–US Trade Deal Tussle: Dairy’s “Non-Veg Milk” Sticking Point

Negotiations on the India–US trade agreement have been complicated by cultural, regulatory and market concerns over U.S. dairy imports, with the contentious issue of so-called “non-veg milk” emerging...Read More

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Anaerobic digestion could cut dairy carbon footprint by 20%

By DairyNews7x7•Published on February 08, 2026

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Combining continuous crop cover with anaerobic digestion of manure and biomass could significantly reduce greenhouse gas emissions from dairy farming, though researchers warn careful management is needed to avoid unintended environmental impacts.

A Penn State-led study has found that using anaerobic digestion to convert dairy manure alongside grassy biomass into biogas could reduce the carbon footprint of milk production by over 20% compared with traditional dairy farm management.

The research, published in Environmental Science and Technology, evaluated the "Grass2Gas" approach on a simulated large Pennsylvania dairy farm, combining year-round vegetation cover with anaerobic digestion – a microbial process that converts organic matter into combustible biogas, consisting primarily of methane.

However, the study revealed complex trade-offs. Whilst continuous cover reduces nutrient runoff, growing additional vegetation for anaerobic digestion increased the need for off-farm feed imports in most scenarios, offsetting many water quality benefits from a lifecycle perspective.

"Our research highlights the complexities of integrating anaerobic digestion into farm systems, including the impact on soil biogeochemistry and nutrient balances," said senior author Christine Costello, assistant professor of agricultural and biological engineering at Penn State.

The researchers found that reducing herd size to match available feed resulted in small milk losses comparable to typical wastage levels in the dairy supply chain.

The digestion process changes manure chemistry, particularly how nitrogen is stored and released. This means digestate – the nutrient-rich fertiliser remaining after anaerobic digestion – behaves differently in soil and air than undigested manure, considerably influencing emissions of ammonia, nitrous oxide and nitrate.

"Agricultural and environmental scientists, engineers and policymakers should think about crop and livestock production and energy technology as one interconnected system," said Costello. "When we add an energy-production technology to a farm, we really need to think about how the residual materials will be handled."

The research was supported by the US Department of Agriculture's National Institute of Food and Agriculture.

Source : DAirynews7x7 Feb 8th 2026 Bioenergy Insight

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