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Fonterra Shifts to Protein After $4.2B Mainland ExitCheap US Imports: Aid for Dairy, Pain for Soy FarmersDDGS & Sorghum Imports: Impact on Feed and Maize PricesBihar to Form Milk Producers’ Committees in Every VillageChennai Corporation Cow-Shed Milk Wins Resident Fans

Indian Dairy News

Cheap US Imports: Aid for Dairy, Pain for Soy Farmers
Feb 10, 2026

Cheap US Imports: Aid for Dairy, Pain for Soy Farmers

The unfolding India–US trade framework that reduces tariffs and import costs on American goods is expected to create short-term advantages for India’s dairy processors, but stakeholders warn it could...Read More

Bihar to Form Milk Producers’ Committees in Every Village
Feb 09, 2026

Bihar to Form Milk Producers’ Committees in Every Village

Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar has announced a comprehensive plan to strengthen the state’s dairy sector by establishing Milk Producers’ Committees in every village within the next two years. The i...Read More

Chennai Corporation Cow-Shed Milk Wins Resident Fans
Feb 09, 2026

Chennai Corporation Cow-Shed Milk Wins Resident Fans

Milk produced from cow sheds run by the Greater Chennai Corporation has emerged as a hit among local residents, with many consumers praising its freshness, taste and perceived quality compared to comm...Read More

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DDGS & Sorghum Imports: Impact on Feed and Maize Prices
Feb 09, 2026

DDGS & Sorghum Imports: Impact on Feed and Maize Prices

In a significant development under the India-US interim trade framework, India has agreed to allow duty-free imports of dried distillers’ grains with solubles (DDGS) and red sorghum from the United St...Read More

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
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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

Global Dairy News

Fonterra Shifts to Protein After $4.2B Mainland Exit
Feb 10, 2026

Fonterra Shifts to Protein After $4.2B Mainland Exit

Fonterra is positioning itself around surging global protein demand, which executives describe as exceptionally strong across Europe and the United States. Dairy protein’s quality and versatility...Read More

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

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

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Cheap US Imports: Aid for Dairy, Pain for Soy Farmers

By DairyNews7x7•Published on February 10, 2026

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The unfolding India–US trade framework that reduces tariffs and import costs on American goods is expected to create short-term advantages for India’s dairy processors, but stakeholders warn it could deliver a heavy blow to Indian soybean and pulse farmers if agricultural imports are liberalised too widely.

Under the deal, tariff concessions on US agricultural and food products may lower input costs for dairy product manufacturers — reducing prices for ingredients such as feed components, whey proteins and certain food additives — which could help processors improve margins and compete in value-added categories. Lower import duties on bulk dairy inputs could also encourage domestic firms to expand processing capacity and diversify product portfolios.

However, the flip side is concern among oilseed growers and pulse producers, particularly soybean farmers in central India, who fear that cheaper US soy, soybean meal and related products could flood the domestic market. India’s own soybean farmers already grapple with price volatility, and a surge of low-cost imports could depress local values, undermining farm incomes and rural purchasing power.

Trade analysts note that soy-based feed components — crucial for dairy cattle nutrition — represent a major cost driver for Indian dairy farmers. While access to more affordable international feed could help reduce production costs, farmers remain cautious that cheaper imports could also reduce demand for locally grown feed crops, shifting risk from processors to growers.

The broader agricultural community is urging policymakers to balance tariff reductions with targeted protections such as minimum import prices, quantity quotas or stringent quality standards to ensure that domestic producers — both dairy and oilseed — aren’t unduly displaced. There’s also a call for strengthening value chain linkages, storage infrastructure and processing incentives to make local products more competitive.

For the Indian dairy sector, the immediate impact of cheaper imported inputs could translate into lower input costs and improved affordability of certain dairy products, potentially boosting consumption and processing margins. But long-term sustainability hinges on careful regulatory calibration so that feed import benefits don’t come at the expense of soybean and legume farmers who underpin much of the rural agri-economy.

Source : Dairynews7x7 Feb 10th 2026 Read full story here

#IndiaUSTrade #DairyProcessing #AgriImports #SoybeanFarmers #FeedCostDynamics #TradePolicyImpact #RuralEconomy

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