
A relentless heatwave sweeping across Sirsa district has taken a toll on dairy farming, with milk production plunging sharply this June. Data from the Vita Milk Plant shows that milk collection has dropped to just 13.88 lakh kilograms till June 20, marking a nearly 60% decline since March, when production peaked at over 33.8 lakh kg.
Vita Milk Plant – milk collection (last 4 months)The drop reflects not just the rising mercury — Sirsa recorded 47.6°C on June 14, the highest in Haryana and Punjab — but also the prolonged absence of rainfall, frequent power cuts and acute water and green fodder shortage that have made livestock management an uphill battle for farmers.Month Cow milk (kg) Buffalo milk (kg) Total (kg) Avg/day (kg)
March 20,55,545 13,27,912 33,83,462 1,09,143
April 19,47,860 9,86,365 29,34,286 97,807
May 16,89,422 6,79,619 23,69,106 76,423
June (till 20th) 10,58,725 3,29,404 13,88,130 69,406
March saw cow milk touch 20.5 lakh kg and buffalo milk 13.3 lakh kg, but those figures have more than halved by June. In May, the plant recorded 23.7 lakh kg and in April, 29.3 lakh kg. For June, the daily average collection has fallen to just 69,406 kg — down from over 1.09 lakh kg per day in March.
Mewa Ram and Sohan Lal echoed similar struggles, noting that even the fat content in milk has dropped, affecting quality and income.
In many homes, the crisis is so acute that dairy families are now buying milk for personal use. Rekha, Daya, Roshni Devi and Babita, all women dairy farmers, said, “Our animals are getting only dry chaff and broken grains. Without green fodder and water, there’s barely any milk left for our households.”
“Farmers should bathe animals 3-4 times daily, ensure constant water supply, shade and use fans or coolers wherever possible,” he added. Sirsa district is home to approximately 5 lakh milch animals.
Source : Dairynews7x7 June 26th 2025 The Tribune