Madhya Pradesh Targets 52 Lakh Kg Daily Milk Procurement

Chief Minister Mohan Yadav announced the state government's target to increase daily milk procurement to 52 lakh kilograms. The initiative aims to boost farmers' income by expanding dairy cooperatives to 26,000 villages. The government has partnered with the National Dairy Development Board to improve procurement efficiency. New technologies, including a mobile-based milk procurement system, are being introduced to enhance transparency.

Key Points: MP's Dairy Push: 52 Lakh Kg Milk Goal

  • 52 lakh kg daily milk procurement target set
  • 26,000 villages to be connected with dairy activities
  • 1,752 new dairy societies formed in 2025-26
  • Mobile-based milk procurement system introduced
2 min read

MP govt targets 52 lakh kg daily milk procurement: CM Yadav​

MP CM Mohan Yadav announces target to procure 52 lakh kg milk daily. New dairy societies, tech upgrades, and NDDB collaboration aim to boost farmer income.

MP govt targets 52 lakh kg daily milk procurement: CM Yadav​
"Dairy development is emerging as an effective means to increase farmers' income... - CM Mohan Yadav"

Bhopal, April 24

Chief Minister Mohan Yadav said on Friday that the Madhya Pradesh government is accelerating efforts to expand the dairy sector, positioning it as a key pillar for boosting farmers' income and strengthening the rural economy.​

Chairing a review meeting of the Madhya Pradesh State Cooperative Dairy Federation, the Chief Minister said dairy activities are being actively promoted under the "Farmer Welfare Year" to create sustainable livelihood opportunities.​

"Dairy development is emerging as an effective means to increase farmers' income, and the government is working to expand its reach across villages through a cooperative framework," he said in a statement.​

Emphasising the role of institutional support, Yadav noted that collaboration with the National Dairy Development Board has led to improvements in milk procurement and in farmers' price realisation.​

He stressed that the National Dairy Development Board's expertise should be utilised from the state level down to grassroots dairy societies to ensure efficiency and consistency in operations.​

The Chief Minister directed officials to implement a time-bound action plan to expand dairy cooperative coverage, set up new processing and product manufacturing units, modernise animal feed plants, and digitalise the dairy value chain.​

He also called for strengthening branding and adopting innovative packaging to widen market access for milk and dairy products.​

"Effective utilisation of the National Dairy Development Board's experience, along with better branding and packaging, will help expand the reach of dairy products," Yadav said.

He added that farmers and youth must be encouraged to adopt modern dairy technologies and innovative practices.​

According to officials, the state has set a target to connect 26,000 villages with dairy activities and increase daily milk procurement to 52 lakh kilograms. In 2025-26, 1,752 new dairy cooperative societies were formed, while 701 inactive societies were revived, reflecting a renewed push for cooperative expansion.​

The meeting was informed that the state currently records daily milk procurement of around 9.67 lakh kilograms, supported by the installation of 153 bulk milk coolers.​

To improve transparency and efficiency, the government has introduced a mobile-based milk procurement system, enabling farmers to access real-time data on milk quantity, quality, and pricing, while a field force monitoring application has been launched to strengthen operational oversight.​

Efforts are also underway to improve milk quality and processing capacity, with projects including a milk powder plant in Indore and upgrades to dairy facilities in Shivpuri and Gwalior, as the state moves to build a more robust and technology-driven dairy ecosystem.​

- IANS

Share this article:

Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
This is promising. I'm from Indore, and the milk powder plant will definitely create jobs. But we need to ensure farmers get fair prices, not just middlemen benefiting. The digitalisation part sounds good, but rural internet connectivity is still patchy. Hope the government addresses these ground-level issues. 🐄
D
Deepak U
As a dairy farmer in Gwalior, I welcome this. But the government must also focus on animal health and fodder availability. Most small farmers can't afford expensive feed. Also, reviving 701 inactive societies is great, but what about the thousands that are still non-functional? Need more grassroots support. 👍
L
Lisa P
Impressive target, but let's be realistic. 52 lakh kg daily procurement is a 5x increase from current levels. This requires massive investment in infrastructure, training, and market linkages. The mobile-based system is a nice touch, but many farmers are elderly and not tech-savvy. Simple solutions work better. Still, good initiative overall.
P
Priya S
Finally, some real focus on dairy! I've seen how our village dairy society transformed after they got a bulk milk cooler. But the government must also support women dairy farmers, who do most of the work but get little recognition. Inclusion of youth and modern technologies is essential. Let's hope this is executed well. 🌟

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50