Amul, NDDB can jointly explore dairy machinery manufacturing, says Amit Shah bl-premium-article-image

Rutam Vora Updated - September 12, 2022 at 09:11 PM.

Despite achieving self-reliance in milk production, Indian dairy processing still dependent on imported machines

After having assigned the dairy major Amul a task to provide marketing platform for organic food products, Union Minister for Cooperation, Amit Shah on Monday gave the Gujarat Cooperative Milk Marketing Federation Ltd (GCMMF) and the dairy body National Dairy Development Board (NDDB), a responsibility to make India self-reliant in dairy machinery manufacturing.

At the International Dairy Federation (IDF)'s World Dairy Summit 2022 here, Shah asked the co-operative dairy leaders to consider becoming self-reliant in equipment manufacturing.

"We have achieved self-reliance in milk production. But we are still dependent on imported processing machineries for value-added dairy products. I am fully confident that NDDB and Amul can jointly take this up. The NCDC (National Cooperative Development Corporation) has a lot of funds available so there is no issue of finance. If we take this up, then we would be self-reliant even in the dairy machinery production and could contribute to the world market," said Shah.

Co-operative model

Addressing the IDF-WDS 2022, Shah also stated that the world can take examples of co-operative model in India and apply it as an alternative economic models to achieve inclusion and broader welfare objectives.

"India's co-operatives history is about 120 years old. India has offered the world an alternative and yet successful model to communist model (which has state-controlled production), and a market model (which works on mass production by corporate).

In India there are about 1.8 crore farmers spread across two lakh villages of the country. Most of them are connected to co-operative dairying through the model of operation flood, which was implemented in early 1970s. India's annual milk production grew at a meagre 1 per cent rate, while a decade following the operation flood implementation, this rate grew to 4.6 per cent and and subsequently to 5 per cent. India's annual growth rate of milk production is about 6 per cent at present and milk production of about 210 million tonnes.

"Today, there are 2 lakh village milk societies. I assure you that before 2024 elections, we will create additional 2 lakh dairies and will increase the milk production by 1.75 times. Operation flood has contributed to India's dairy sector and milk production," said Shah.

Published on September 12, 2022 15:25

This is a Premium article available exclusively to our subscribers.

Subscribe now to and get well-researched and unbiased insights on the Stock market, Economy, Commodities and more...

You have reached your free article limit.

Subscribe now to and get well-researched and unbiased insights on the Stock market, Economy, Commodities and more...

You have reached your free article limit.
Subscribe now to and get well-researched and unbiased insights on the Stock market, Economy, Commodities and more...

TheHindu Businessline operates by its editorial values to provide you quality journalism.

This is your last free article.