Logo
IndianGlobalBlogsPublicationsPodcastsMarketAboutContact
Logo
IndianGlobalBlogsPublicationsPodcasts
7News
Rajahmundry Milk Crisis: 4 Dead, Dozens HospitalisedRajasthan Minister Links Cow Milk to IntelligenceAavin Salem Plant Marks 40 Years with 10 Milkshake Variantsa2 Milk to Launch Pediatric Supplements in ChinaRussia Dumps Milk Amid Dairy Overproduction Crisis

Indian Dairy News

Rajahmundry Milk Crisis: 4 Dead, Dozens Hospitalised
Feb 24, 2026

Rajahmundry Milk Crisis: 4 Dead, Dozens Hospitalised

The death toll in a suspected milk contamination and anuria (absence of urine) incident in Rajahmundry has risen to four, triggering an intensive investigation into whether adulterated milk sup...Read More

Rajasthan Minister Links Cow Milk to Intelligence
Feb 24, 2026

Rajasthan Minister Links Cow Milk to Intelligence

Rajasthan’s Education Minister Madan Dilawar stirred controversy after claiming that drinking milk from indigenous cows makes children “active and intelligent,” while those who drink buffalo mi...Read More

Aavin Salem Plant Marks 40 Years with 10 Milkshake Variants
Feb 24, 2026

Aavin Salem Plant Marks 40 Years with 10 Milkshake Variants

The Aavin dairy unit in Salem is celebrating four decades of operation by anchoring the cooperative federation’s milkshake programme with 10 diverse flavors that have become hugely popular across Tami...Read More

DairyNews7x7
Advertisement

Latest Blogs

See More
India’s First Cow Culture Museum in Mathura
Feb 16, 2026

India’s First Cow Culture Museum in Mathura

India’s first national “Cow Culture Museum” is set to be established in Mathura, Uttar Pradesh, on the campus of Pandit Deendayal Upadhyaya Veterinary Science University, announced the Uttar Pradesh B...Read More

Why India’s Dairy Needs a National Fodder Grid ?
Feb 15, 2026

Why India’s Dairy Needs a National Fodder Grid ?

Recently, I moderated the Farmer's session at 52nd DIC. While deliberating on pathways for Kerala to move towards milk self-reliance, K S Mani, Chairman of Milma, articulated a compelling thought: jus...Read More

Coliform in Milk -Look Beyond Brands to Cold Chain Gaps
Feb 12, 2026

Coliform in Milk -Look Beyond Brands to Cold Chain Gaps

Recent independent lab tests have triggered alarm over coliform bacteria and high total plate counts (TPC) in popular pouch milk brands — Amul Taaza, Amul Gold, Mother Dairy and Country Delight...Read More

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

Global Dairy News

a2 Milk to Launch Pediatric Supplements in China
Feb 24, 2026

a2 Milk to Launch Pediatric Supplements in China

New Zealand-based The a2 Milk Company is gearing up to expand beyond infant formula in China with a Q3 2026 launch of four pediatric nutritional supplements under its a2 Zhi Yi brand, aiming at immuni...Read More

Russia Dumps Milk Amid Dairy Overproduction Crisis
Feb 24, 2026

Russia Dumps Milk Amid Dairy Overproduction Crisis

Massive disposal of unsold milk and surging retail prices spotlight supply–demand imbalances in Russia’s dairy sector. Russia’s dairy sector is facing an acute overproduction crisis, with authoriti...Read More

Belarus Lifts Skimmed Milk Powder Export Prices
Feb 23, 2026

Belarus Lifts Skimmed Milk Powder Export Prices

The Ministry of Agriculture and Food for the Republic of Belarus has issued a new pricing directive that raises minimum export prices for skimmed milk powder (SMP) destined for several neighbou...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
Prefer Us
Prefer Us

DAIRY NEWS Dairy Farmers in Bangladesh facing floods as lethal as a second wave after Covid:

By DairyNews7x7•Published on August 10, 2020

DAIRY NEWS Dairy Farmers in Bangladesh facing floods as lethal as a second wave after Covid:
Prefer on

Rajib Miah, a dairy farmer from Shahjadpur upazila in Sirajganj, thought the worst was behind him when the government lifted the countrywide shutdown on 30 May and was looking forward to recouping the losses brought on the pandemic. But his hopes were dashed on one fateful night last month that saw floodwater submerge his cowshed.

He rushed to the shed and rescued his 18 cattle and took them to a street nearby. Since then, the cows have made the street their homes. Miah’s perils did not end there. As the protracted flooding inundated grazing lands, he was compelled to sell two of the cows to feed the rest of the cattle as his earnings from selling milk plummeted. Now, he can’t collect even half the amount of milk he was used to as his cows are not fed adequately.

I don’t know how I would be able to recoup the losses and when everything would return to normalcy,” he told The Daily Star. Miah is not alone as thousands of farmers like him across the country received the fresh blow of flood after the coronavirus. Milking by Md Ripon and Md Rafiqul Islam in Chatmohar of Pabna, who have seven and four cows respectively, dropped 30 to 35 per cent in the last one month due to flooding.

Demand of milk dropped down by 20-25%

Around half of the daily production of milk remained unsold for the first two months since the deadly virus arrived on the shores of Bangladesh in March. Due to the closure of sweet shops, restaurants, hotels and schools and the countrywide movement control order, demand for milk nosedived between May and June. Just when the demand was picking up, on came the floods.

Milk production averages 2.2 crore litres daily in Bangladesh. But due to floods, production went down 25 per cent, according to industry insiders. Processors buy 14 lakh litres and the rest is sold to sweet shops and households. Farmers sell milk to processors for Tk 35 to Tk 47 a litre.

Milk collected by Brac Dairy & Food Enterprise, which markets products under the Aarong Dairy brand, fell 25 per cent to 1.1 lakh litres per day due to the floods. Aarong Dairy’s sales plummeted more than 40 per cent in May and June, said Mohammad Anisur Rahman, a director of Brac Dairy & Food Enterprise.

The floods inundated more than 30 per cent of its 108 collection centres in Pabna, Sirajganj, Natore, Bogura and Kurigram. At the beginning of the shutdown put in place to tame coronavirus, Aarong Dairy bought about 1.7 lakh litres of the liquid per day, up from an average daily collection of 1.25 lakh litres.

Processors are forced to reduce their milk procurement

But within two weeks, the milk processor, which has 28,000 registered farmers, had to stop buying the extra milk after demand collapsed. The company’s storages were also overwhelmed by 1 lakh tonnes of UHT (ultra-high temperature) milk and 150 tonnes powdered milk, according to Rahman. Milk production by Akij Dairy, which sells under the Farm Fresh brand, halved to about 28,000 litres per day.

“The floods inundated the houses and farmhouses of dairy farmers. Almost all the grass fields, one of the sources of cow feed, are now underwater,” said Md Mosleh Uddin, chief executive officer of Akij Dairy. In April and May, the sales of milk of Farm Fresh brand, which collects the liquid food through its 35 chilling centres from farmers mainly in Pabna, Sirajganj, Jashore, Khulna and Chapainawabganj, crashed 40 to 45 per cent.

“This has been a bad year for the dairy industry in Bangladesh so far. Unless all educational institutions, hotels and restaurants reopen and everything returns to normal, the downturn will continue,” Mosleh Uddin said. Before the floods, Pran Dairy used to collect 2 lakh litres of milk every day from its 12,000 registered farmers. Now, the procurement has dropped to 150,000 litres.

Floods are adding to woes of dairy farmers after covid

Most flood-hit areas for the brand are Shahjadpur and Baghabari of Sirajganj, where collection and chilling centres have almost gone out of operation.  “Despite all the difficulties created by the floods, our staff are going to remote areas on rented boats or three-wheelers to collect milk so that farmers’ sufferings ease,” said Kamruzzaman Kamal, marketing director at Pran-RFL Group.

Milk collection by state-run Bangladesh Milk Producers Co-operative Union, popularly known as Milk Vita, has also decreased to about 1.10 lakh litres per day. The company now sells about 90,000 litres daily. Before the natural disaster, it used to collect more than 1.5 lakh litres from 1.2 lakh farmers.

“Even after the shutdown, our milk collection was pretty good. But now the floods have brought down the collection significantly,” said Omor Chan Bonik, managing director of Milk Vita, which increased the price of milk by Tk 2 per litre to help farmers during the pandemic. Milk production hasn’t decreased much, said Mohammad Imran Hossain, president of the Bangladesh Dairy Farmers’ Association.

He went on to urge the milk processors to buy more milk from farmers.  Kamal of Pran-RFL urged the government to expand its support for the sector by increasing the number of veterinarians and other facilities.    “There is a high chance of attaining self-sufficiency in dairy production,” he added.

As reported by Mahmudul Hasan in The Dailystar Bangladesh

Stay Updated

Get the latest dairy industry news directly in your feed.

Prefer Us on Google Search

Swipe to continue reading

Previous Article

Next Article