Indian Dairy Industry facing the Leadership Challenge
Indian Dairy Industry facing the Leadership Challenge
“National Dairy Plan needs critical review”
By:
Vijay Sardana
Leading Agribusiness and Bio-economy
Expert
Blog: “Vijay Sardana Online”
Population
of India in 2020-21 will be about 1.326 billion. According to RDA -2010 for moderately active person, the milk requirement is 300 ml
per day. At the rate of 300
ml per day per person, India needs about 145 million tons of milk per year. Let
us add another 10% i.e. 15 million tons for exports and other applications. The
total demand should not exceed about 160 million tons.
National
Dairy Plan is proposing 200 million tons milk production:
1. What is the calculation behind these
numbers?
2. How much feed and fodder is required to
produce the 200 million tons of milk?
3. Do we have land and water to produce this
excess quantity of milk?
4. What will be the environmental impact of
excess production?
5. What will be the impact of excess
production of milk on natural resources and food security of India?
Let
us look at some of the hard facts before addressing these vital facts:
Feed and Fodder Requirements:
According
to NIANP estimates, to produce 160 million tons we will need about 530 million
tons of Dry fodder, 880 million tons of green fodder and about 96 million tons
of concentrate.
Land Requirement for Feed and Fodder
cultivation:
According
to current data, dry fodder yield is about 15 tons per hectare, green fodder is
about 70 tons per hectare and concentrate is about 2.5 tons per hectare. After
considering the above fact, the land requirement for to produce dry fodder,
green fodder and concentrate will be about 80 million hectare of land. Even if
we take two crops a year, still 40 million hectare land will be blocked for
feed and fodder production. The total land available in India for agriculture
cultivation is about 141 million hectare. It means about 30% of total
agriculture land will be blocked only for milk production related activities.
If we assume that National Dairy Plan is targeting 200 million tons of milk
production, add another 10 million hectares of land for feed and food
requirements. It means according to NDP targets, one third of land in India
should produce feed and fodder to meet milk production targets.
Pasturelands
and other wastelands do not have enough productivity to meet the growing demand
of feed and fodder. With growing urbanization, pasturelands are also shrinking.
In agriculturally developed and irrigated states there are no more grazing
areas.
Now,
the question is – where is the feed and fodder to meet the demand for milk in
India?
Water Requirements:
Milk production is becoming
water-intensive and exhaustive, so there is strong need for bringing down the
water footprint of milk for sustainable dairy farming. Indirect component is
the major part, key role of feed and fodder crops made it point of check. On
the basis of milk output, the water footprints are higher for buffalo than cow.
The average of water use for buffalo milk production is 2000 liter (2
m3/kg). These high water footprints were
due to more water consumption through feed and fodder and comparatively lower
yields.
Water consumed per kg of milk is
relatively lesser in case of crossbred cow due to their higher productivity.
Milk productivity and water footprint per unit milk yield is inversely
correlated. National average of water foot print average is about 1.37m3/kg.
It is important to note that 60
liter of water is consumed to produce a rupee worth of milk output, if the farm
gate price of milk is about 19 to 20 per litre. The per capita availability of
water is about 1700 liter per person per day by 2030.
For 200 million tons of milk
production, we will need about 400 billion cubic meter of water. The Central
Water Commission monitors the live storage of 91 important / major reservoirs,
having capacity at Full Reservoir Level (FRL) of 157.80 billion cubic meters
(BCM), which is about 62% of total reservoir capacity in the country. NDP will
demand more than the total water in reservoirs in India. Is this logical?
Livestock
methane-emission inventory:
Methane — a greenhouse gas that traps 20 times more heat than carbon
dioxide. In 2009, scientists at the
Space Applications Centre in Ahmedabad published a pan-India livestock
methane-emission inventory, the first ever, which put the figure at 11.75
million metric tons per year. In 2009, the milk production was 115 million
tons. It means, for every 10 million tons of milk production we will have to
accept 1 million ton of methane release from milking animals. It is equal to
about 20 million tons in Carbon dioxide terms. If NDP is projecting 200 million
tons of milk production, we should also gear-up to manage 20 million tons of
methane gas production from ruminants.
It means with 200 million tons milk production , we will have 400
millions of Carbon dioxide equivalent. On
the other hand, per capita carbon dioxide emission in India is about 1.8 tons
per year i.e. by 2020 it will be, 2.5 billion tons per year. It means 16% green
house gases will come only from milk production. This will not be acceptable
under any parameter.
The way forward..
It is high time we should look at at
all numbers proposed for National Dairy Development Plan for India, keeping in
mind that we have limited resources and milk is not the only source of
nutrition for citizens. In fact it is very expensive food for common masses.
There is need to relook at feed
formulations, fodder development programs, animal breeding program and dairy
farm management issues.
It is high time, leadership is
required in dairy industry to give logical direction to Indian dairy industry
and to make it relevant for overall development plan of India at the same time
to retain global competitiveness.
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