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Feed Inflation Now Top Stress for India’s Dairy FarmersIndia’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 Punjab

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Feed Inflation Now Top Stress for India’s Dairy Farmers
Jan 09, 2026

Feed Inflation Now Top Stress for India’s Dairy Farmers

Dairy farmers across the country are facing intensifying economic stress as feed cost inflation emerges as the greatest pressure point for milk producers, with prices of all key inputs rising sharply,...Read More

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

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U.S. Dietary Guidelines Overhaul Raises Dairy, Meat
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NDDB to build solar-dairy at Kargil for Army milk supply

By DairyNews7x7•Published on December 06, 2025

The NDDB is establishing a solar-powered milk processing plant in Kargil — one of the highest-altitude dairying projects in India — to ensure supply of fresh milk to Indian Army units deployed in remote, high-altitude regions such as Siachen, Nubra Valley, Leh and other posts.

The planned facility will have a processing capacity of 10,000 litres per day and aims to engage approximately 1,500 local farmers from the Kargil region. This initiative builds on a previous facility in Leh (serving army and local consumers), reflecting NDDB’s broader strategy to develop a robust dairy value-chain in high-altitude and remote areas.

Because Kargil and surrounding areas experience extreme cold, limited electricity availability, and logistical challenges, the plant will run on solar energy — using renewable energy and cold-chain technology to enable chilling, pasteurisation and safe supply of liquid milk under harsh climatic conditions.

NDDB and the regional UT administration of Ladakh (covering Leh & Kargil districts) have formalised the plan under a long-term dairy-development programme that includes procurement systems, processing infrastructure, animal-productivity support, and marketing under the trade name (for example, “Oma” brand) for local/regional distribution.

Officials say the initiative will not only meet the supply needs of the armed forces but also provide a sustainable livelihood and stable income to local dairy farmers in Ladakh — a region where dairy was earlier largely unorganised due to geographic and climatic constraints.

Analysis & Implications

What’s significant about this initiative

  • Overcoming high-altitude logistical challenges: Supplying fresh milk to remote, high-altitude military posts (like Siachen, Nubra, Kargil) has historically been difficult due to harsh climate, lack of regular electricity, cold storage issues and long transport distances. A solar-powered dairy there is a game-changer — enabling local milk collection, chilling & processing, reducing dependence on imported or pre-packed milk.

  • Livelihood generation & rural income support: By engaging roughly 1,500 local farmers, the project offers stable procurement and assured demand in a region where dairy options have been limited. This can help stabilise incomes, reduce out-migration, and encourage dairying even in marginal geographies.

  • Renewable energy + sustainability model: Running a dairy plant on solar power addresses the twin challenge of unreliable electricity and high energy costs. It fits with NDDB’s broader “solar / sustainable dairy value-chain” goals.

  • Enhanced market access & value-addition potential in remote zones: With processing in place, even remote milk producers get connected to a formal supply-chain; surplus milk can be converted to pasteurised liquid milk or other dairy products — potentially opening new market (civilian, army, tourist) demand in high-altitude zones.

Challenges & Risks to Monitor

  • Animal-health & climate constraints: High-altitude cold desert conditions (Ladakh / Kargil) pose significant challenges to animal productivity, fodder availability, reproduction, and dairy yield. Mortality, low yield, seasonal production swings are documented issues.

  • Sustaining supply in harsh winters: Even with solar energy, ensuring collection and chilling during freezing conditions or snow can be logistically tough; villages are scattered — transport, road closure risk, and weather disruptions could interrupt supply.

  • Cost & economic viability: Operating a dairy at high altitude with small herd sizes may carry higher per-litre costs (fodder transport, maintenance, energy, logistics). The viability will depend on consistent procurement volumes and stable demand (army + local).

  • Scaling beyond army supply: For long-term sustainability, demand needs to come not only from army but civilian market (tourism, local population) or value-addition (e.g. niche high-altitude dairy products), else risk of underutilised capacity.

Source : Dairynews7x7 Dec 6th 2025 Hindu Businessline and others

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