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India’s Dairy Sector Rethinks Supply Trust & Nutrition StrategyU.S. Dietary Guidelines Overhaul Raises Dairy, MeatYear end review of Animal Husbandry and Dairy for the year 2025Fog & Frost Pose New Risks to Agriculture & Dairy in PunjabNandini Adopts AI-Based Product Counting to Boost Dairy Operations

Indian Dairy News

India’s Dairy Sector Rethinks Supply Trust & Nutrition Strategy
Jan 09, 2026

India’s Dairy Sector Rethinks Supply Trust & Nutrition Strategy

India’s dairy industry — long anchored in high production volumes but thin value realisation — is undergoing strategic recalibration around supply reliability, consumer trust and long-term nutrition v...Read More

Year end review of Animal Husbandry and Dairy  for the year 2025
Jan 09, 2026

Year end review of Animal Husbandry and Dairy for the year 2025

Hon'ble Prime Minister inaugurates Regional Center of Excellence (CoE) for Indigenous Breeds established at Motihari with an investment of Rs 33.80 crore. Genotyping of 75000 animals from the first...Read More

Fog & Frost Pose New Risks to Agriculture & Dairy in Punjab
Jan 08, 2026

Fog & Frost Pose New Risks to Agriculture & Dairy in Punjab

Persistent dense fog and dropping temperatures across Punjab — especially around Ludhiana and surrounding districts — are raising fresh concerns for both agriculture and dairy sectors, as winter weath...Read More

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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

Vision 2047: India’s Dairy Development Roadmap
Dec 21, 2025

Vision 2047: India’s Dairy Development Roadmap

As India moves steadily toward Vision 2047, the dairy sector stands at a strategic inflection point. From being a food security instrument in the decades following Independence, dairy has evolved into...Read More

Global Dairy Dynamics: Innovation, Sustainability & Inclusion
Dec 18, 2025

Global Dairy Dynamics: Innovation, Sustainability & Inclusion

The International Dairy Processing Conference (IDPC) 2026, organised by the Trade Promotion Council of India (TPCI) at Yashobhoomi Convention Centre, Dwarka, New Delhi on 7 January 2026, will serve as...Read More

Global Dairy News

U.S. Dietary Guidelines Overhaul Raises Dairy, Meat
Jan 09, 2026

U.S. Dietary Guidelines Overhaul Raises Dairy, Meat

The newly released 2025–2030 U.S. Dietary Guidelines, unveiled by Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and the Department of Agriculture, represent a major shift in federal nutrition policy, placing...Read More

Spoiled Dairy Becomes 3D Printing Plastic
Jan 07, 2026

Spoiled Dairy Becomes 3D Printing Plastic

Researchers patent a biomaterial from wasted milk proteins, creating biodegradable 3D printing filament and a potential new revenue stream for dairy. Excess milk that once flowed down farm drains duri...Read More

Milk production declines amid rising water costs
Jan 07, 2026

Milk production declines amid rising water costs

Dairy producers across Victoria are facing a tightening operating environment, with declining milk flows and escalating water and fodder costs, according to the Dairy Australia Situation and Outlook Y...Read More

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FTA Spurs Value-Added Dairy Export Paths, Says Prem Maan

By DairyNews7x7•Published on December 25, 2025

In the wake of the India–New Zealand Free Trade Agreement (FTA), industry voices from New Zealand’s dairy sector are pointing to emerging opportunities for value-added exports, even as traditional bulk dairy access remains limited. Prem Maan, a senior industry analyst, said the pact’s structure — though not granting direct tariff cuts for core dairy imports into India — could still support value-added ingredient trade and re-export-oriented dairy processing schemes that benefit processors on both sides.

Under the agreement, while India preserved its protective stance on domestic dairy, New Zealand exporters may explore niche entry points tied to high-value products and specialised components such as certain whey concentrates, caseinates, speciality milk powders and other ingredient-level categories. These can be incorporated into value-added formulations in Indian processing plants — for products that eventually serve regional export markets or specialised food segments. The key, according to Maan, is not raw commodity access, but strategic integration in dairy value chains.

A central theme of Maan’s analysis is that India’s sheer dairy scale — largest global milk producer with an annual output exceeding 240 million tonnes — presents downstream export potential that goes beyond basic powders. Processors investing in blending, fortification and branded products can use imported ingredients to meet international compliance standards and specialised technical specifications, particularly for markets demanding consistency and functionality. The FTA’s provisions on processing and re-export give a framework for such trade flows, enabling Indian facilities to act as production hubs for high-value export lines.

This narrative contrasts with earlier headline concerns that the India–NZ FTA delivered little in terms of immediate dairy market access for New Zealand. Maan’s insight reframes the pact as a catalyst for value-chain collaboration, allowing both countries to leverage their complementary strengths: New Zealand’s advanced processing inputs and India’s scale, workforce and emerging branded dairy economy. While bulk milk and basic powder imports for domestic consumption were explicitly excluded by Indian negotiators, the agreement creates a platform for specialised trade pathways that may deepen over time.

Strategically, dairy exporters in both countries will need to align with evolving food safety, traceability and quality compliance regimes — including FSSAI standards in India and Codex/ISO standards in export destinations — to fully capitalise on the opportunities signalled by the FTA. This may also encourage further public–private partnerships and bilateral technical cooperation in areas such as membrane technologies, quality analytics and cold chain optimisation.

In summary, while the India–New Zealand FTA stopped short of opening India’s domestic milk market, it may indirectly support value-added dairy exports through re-export and processing-linked provisions. Industry analysts like Prem Maan view this as a pragmatic path forward — one that relies on strategic collaboration, targeted product design and export-oriented processing investments rather than tariff liberalisation alone.

Source : DAirynews7x7 Dec 25th 2025 Read full story here 

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