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India recorded all-time high milk production of 209 million tonnes in 2020-21 & cows accounted for 51% of this, govt figures show.
Image for representation | ANI

New Delhi: For the first time in many years, India’s cows — infamous for their low productivity — have left buffaloes behind, while also pushing India’s total milk production to record levels.

According to the latest statistics provided by the Department of Animal Husbandry and Dairying (DAHD), in the year 2020-21, India recorded an all-time high milk production of 209 million tonnes (provisional data), more than half of which came from cows.

Buffaloes had been the leading producer until this point. For example, in 2016-17, they accounted for about 49.2 per cent India’s milk production, while cows yielded 47.3 per cent and goats 3.5 per cent of the total 165.4 million tonnes.

But data now shows that by 2020-21, cows accounted for 51 per cent, buffaloes 45 per cent, and goats 3 per cent of the total milk produced in the country — 209.96 million tonnes, which is 27 per cent higher than it was five years ago.

Building ‘moo-mentum’

But what led to this increase in the milk yield for cows? A detailed break-up of the type of cows in India reveals an interesting trend.

There are, broadly speaking, four types of cows in India: indigenous, nondescript, crossbred and exotic.

Of the milk supplied by cows in 2020-21 (51 per cent of the total) indigenous and nondescript cows accounted for only 20 per cent, while the remaining 31 per cent was yielded by crossbred cows (28 per cent) and exotic cows (3 per cent). And it’s the latter two that are fuelling the rise in yield.

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There is no evidence that the milk poses a danger or that a live virus is present, the regulator has said.

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