Logo
IndianGlobalBlogsPublicationsPodcastsMarketAboutContact
Logo
IndianGlobalBlogsPublicationsPodcasts
7News
Cattle rearers prioritise manure and draught power over milkGDT 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 Quality

Indian Dairy News

Cattle rearers prioritise manure and draught power over milk
Jan 21, 2026

Cattle rearers prioritise manure and draught power over milk

More than one-third of India’s cattle rearers prioritise non-market-oriented uses of bovines and do not sell milk, according to a new study by the Council on Energy, Environment and Water (CEEW). The...Read More

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

DairyNews7x7
Advertisement

Latest Blogs

See 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

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

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

DairyNews7x7
Advertisement
Dairy News 7x7

Your trusted source for all the latest dairy industry news, market insights, and trending topics.

FOLLOW US
CATEGORIES
  • Global News
  • Indian News
  • Blogs
  • Publications
  • Podcasts
SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER

Stay informed with the latest updates and trending news in the dairy industry.

No spam, unsubscribe at any time

GET IN TOUCH
C-49, C Block, Sector 65,
Noida, UP 201307
+91 7827405029dairynews7x7@gmail.com

© 2026 Dairy News 7x7. All Rights Reserved.

Terms of ServicePrivacy Policy

Cattle rearers prioritise manure and draught power over milk

By DairyNews7x7•Published on January 21, 2026

More than one-third of India’s cattle rearers prioritise non-market-oriented uses of bovines and do not sell milk, according to a new study by the Council on Energy, Environment and Water (CEEW). The study is based on a first-of-its-kind survey of over 7,300 cattle-rearing households across 15 states, representing 91 per cent of India’s bovine population (including cows, buffaloes, bulls, and bullocks). Milk supports over 80 million livelihoods and contributes 5 per cent to India’s GDP. The study examines how cattle rearing functions as a livelihood system alongside this amid a changing climate.

The CEEW study, Cattle and Community in a Changing Climate, shows that seven per cent of rearers keep cattle exclusively for non-milk purposes such as dung, draught power, or income from selling animals. The share rises to around 15 per cent in states such as West Bengal and Maharashtra. About 74 per cent rearers value dung for manure, fuel, or sale, and many depend on cattle for draught power and broader farm support.

Indigenous cattle play a critical role in these non-market uses, particularly within integrated farming systems. In several states—including Jharkhand, West Bengal, and Himachal Pradesh—more than half of rearers prioritise household milk consumption and use of dung over milk sales, while even in relatively formalised dairy states such as Maharashtra and Karnataka, over 30 per cent prioritise non-milk benefits.

ceew report graphic dairynews7x7

Abhishek Jain, Fellow and Director – Green Economy and Impact Innovations, CEEW, said, “India’s dairy sector policies are primarily focused on milk output, while cattle rearing on the ground functions as a much broader livelihood system. Moreover, as the CEEW study shows, the realities, contexts, challenges and motivations of rearers vary significantly across states and farmer typologies. Aligning public investment with this diverse reality requires moving from uniform dairy strategies to differentiated, responsive policies that reflect how households actually value cattle, the constraints they face, and how climate risks for the sector are evolving. This will not only ensure acceptance of public interventions, thereby improving the effectiveness of budget allocations, but also preserve the rich diversity of rearing systems across the country.”

ceew study graphics 1 dairynews7x7

Cattle rearers also highlighted a range of challenges that they face. Three out of four rearers reported facing feed and fodder shortages, making it the most widespread constraint nationally. While fodder surpluses exist in some regions, affordability concerns persist in most states, and shrinking grazing lands and limited land for fodder cultivation compound the problem. Awareness of key government feeding interventions remains strikingly low: around 80 per cent of rearers are unaware of measures such as silage-making and ration-balancing programmes, and adoption stands at just five per cent. In contrast, less than a quarter of rearers report animal health and breeding challenges, showcasing the success of continued policy focus on improving coverage of artificial insemination, vaccination, and animal deworming.

Climate change is compounding the sector’s challenges. The CEEW study finds that 54 per cent of buffalo rearers, 50 per cent of crossbred rearers, and 41 per cent of indigenous cattle rearers report climate-related impacts. For the rearers, these include higher disease incidence, mortality, and heat-induced stress and restlessness in their animals. While indigenous rearers are most resilient to a changing climate, many rearers seeking to expand their herds want to move to higher-yielding crossbreds and buffaloes. The study cautions that such shifts could increase the sector’s vulnerability to climate stress, and calls for adaptive measures.

Further, the CEEW study highlights that half of India’s rural cattle rearers own just one or two animals. These small herds are concentrated in hilly, central, and eastern regions, while larger herds (over five animals) are more prevalent in states such as Gujarat, Rajasthan, Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, and Punjab. Despite being half of the rearers, small rearers (up to 2 animals in a herd) account for only 29 per cent of total milk production and 22 per cent of milk sales, while medium and large herds generate most of the marketable surplus.

Ruchira Goyal, Programme Associate, CEEW, said, “Feed and fodder shortages cut across regions, animal types, and herd sizes. Yet adoption of basic feeding interventions remains low. Addressing these gaps, through stronger extension services and improved fodder supply chains, can deliver immediate gains for small rearers. To future-proof the sector in the face of rising climate stress and realise the true potential of genetic improvements, budgetary allocations must expand beyond breeding and vaccination to support decentralised, localised feed and fodder solutions. These solutions must respond to local needs: from promoting hydroponics and Azolla cultivation in drier, land-constrained regions to protecting common grazing lands in states like Assam. Such investments can simultaneously improve productivity, resilience, and environmental sustainability.”

CEEW recommends that livestock and allied programmes—including the National Livestock Mission and related state schemes—adopt more targeted approaches aligned with rearer typologies and regional contexts. Priorities include improving last-mile veterinary services, supporting non-milk value chains such as dung-based energy and manure, and integrating climate considerations into breeding choices and animal housing.

Source : Dairynews7x7 Jan 21 2026 DDnews

Swipe to continue reading

Previous Article

Next Article