Mun­eppa (65) of Jangala Agra­ha­ram vil­lage in Pala­maner Assembly con­stitu­ency sits by a forest road lead­ing to the Kound­inya Wild­life Sanc­tu­ary, watch­ing his eight milch cows and a bull graze at a dis­tance. His day begins at 3 a.m., when he milks his cattle and trans­ports to a nearby col­lec­tion centre over 20 litres of milk — which, he fondly calls, “white liquid gold.”

He repeats the routine in the even­ing. “Early to rise, early to sleep. I have no plans except to increase my herd,” Mun­eppa’s words seem to flow out of con­fid­ence, as he bets big on the future of his dairy busi­ness.

“I was a pau­per in 2020. I struggled to pay my grand­chil­dren’s school fees. I owned just two cows then,” he recalls. “Today, I have eight. My grand­son stud­ies engin­eer­ing in Bengaluru, and my grand­daugh­ter’s mar­riage was con­duc­ted decently recently,” he says, exud­ing pride and con­tent­ment.

Farm­ers tend­ing cattle at Mahasamu­dram vil­lage near Chit­toor. Pro­du­cing an estim­ated 18–20 lakh litres daily, Chit­toor ranks among India’s most pro­duct­ive milk belts.

Like Mun­eppa, thou­sands of dairy farm­ers across Chit­toor dis­trict har­bour sim­ilar aspir­a­tions. The for­mid­able pres­ence of the dairy sec­tor is something even a cas­ual vis­itor to the dis­trict will not fail to notice.

Pro­du­cing an estim­ated 18–20 lakh litres of milk daily, Chit­toor ranks among India’s most pro­duct­ive milk belts. Its out­put feeds not only local pop­u­la­tions but also major urban centres such as Tirupati, Bengaluru and Chen­nai, besides hun­dreds of other towns across Andhra Pra­desh and Tamil Nadu.

From the lush vil­lages of Kup­pam and Pala­maner bor­der­ing Tamil Nadu and Karnataka to the semi­arid plains of Bangarupalem, Puthalapattu and Nagari, milk flows through a dense net­work of col­lec­tion routes, sus­tain­ing tens of thou­sands of rural house­holds.

Yet, beneath this scale of prosper­ity lies a sec­tor grap­pling with price volat­il­ity, frag­men­ted pro­cure­ment, rising input costs and insti­tu­tional gaps.

Small farm­ers, big stakes

Over 80% of dairy farm­ers in Chit­toor are small and mar­ginal, typ­ic­ally own­ing two to four cattle. For them, milk is not merely an agri­cul­tural com­mod­ity but an altern­at­ive source of susten­ance to keep the wolf from the door.

Dairy serves as a crit­ical live­li­hood buf­fer, sup­ple­ment­ing rain­depend­ent agri­cul­ture and ensur­ing steady cash flow dur­ing crop fail­ures or lean sea­sons. In man­dals such as Baired­dip­alle, V. Kota, Ramak­up­pam, Gangav­aram, Pala­maner and Gudupalle, dairy income pays for gro­cer­ies, school fees, elec­tri­city bills, veter­in­ary medi­cines and med­ical emer­gen­cies.

A house­hold selling 20 litres a day earns about ₹600, an amount that often determ­ines its sur­vival.

Women, the invis­ible pil­lars

Women shoulder the unseen bur­den of this eco­nomy. From feed­ing and clean­ing to milk­ing, book­keep­ing and milk deliv­ery, they run the sec­tor end to end. With men migrat­ing sea­son­ally for con­struc­tion or indus­trial work, dairy oper­a­tions in regions like Kup­pam and Pala­maner are almost entirely in women’s hands.

Across Chit­toor’s vil­lages, women are the sec

“I was a pau­per in 2020. I owned just two cows then. Today, I have eight. My grand­son stud­ies engin­eer­ing in Bengaluru

tor’s silent man­agers: main­tain­ing accounts, coordin­at­ing deliv­er­ies and nego­ti­at­ing with pro­cure­ment agents. When prices fall, it is they who recal­ib­rate house­hold budgets, defer health­care or take on addi­tional wage work.

Women­led Bulk Milk Chilling Units (BMCUs) have demon­strated how decent­ral­ised insti­tu­tions can sta­bil­ise incomes and improve gov­ernance. However, fund­ing con­straints, power sup­ply issues and main­ten­ance costs limit their scalab­il­ity.

“Dairy gives us dig­nity and daily cash, but only when prices are fair,” says Kath­ali Jamuna (34) of Kup­pam.

Severe blow

The col­lapse of the Chit­toor Cooper­at­ive Milk Pro­du­cers’ Union nearly two dec­ades ago, fol­low­ing the shut­down of Vijaya Dairy, left the sec­tor at a cross­roads.

Once a flag­ship insti­tu­tion pro­cessing lakhs of litres a day, Vijaya Dairy offered stable prices, assured pay­ments and col­lect­ive bar­gain­ing power. Its clos­ure shattered that eco­sys­tem, allow­ing private dair­ies, traders and com­mis­sion agents to dom­in­ate pro­cure­ment.

Prices now vary not just across man­dals, but between neigh­bour­ing vil­lages, depend­ing on buyer dom­in­ance and volumes.

“Milk must be sold within hours. If we reject today’s price, we lose the entire quant­ity,” says Anjamma (45) of V. Kota.

Cur­rently, cow milk prices range between ₹27 and ₹32 per litre, while buf­falo milk fetches ₹35–₹38, depend­ing on fat and SNF con­tent. Rising feed, fod­der, trans­port and veter­in­ary costs, however, have sharply reduced net mar­gins.

Even a ₹2 drop in pro­cure­ment price per litre can cost a small farmer ₹1,200–₹1,500 a month, a ser­i­ous blow.

The spread of BMCUs has been a game­changer. Chit­toor has nearly 100 func­tional chilling units, man­aged by women’s SHGs, vil­lage cooper­at­ives and pro­du­cer col­lect­ives. With capa­cit­ies of 2,000–3,000 litres a day, they col­lect­ively chill over three lakh litres daily.

Chilled milk fetches ₹3–₹7 more per litre than nor­mal milk sold to middle­men.

“Digital test­ing, prin­ted receipts and fixed pay­ment cycles have improved trans­par­ency,” says Ganapathi (54) of Kup­pam. We face short­ages of veter­in­ari­ans, delayed emer­gency care and lim­ited access to afford­able insur­ance

Another major relief has been the entry of Amul through State­backed ini­ti­at­ives, rein­tro­du­cing a com­pet­it­ive bench­mark. Farm­ers report bet­ter prices, trans­par­ent test­ing and assured pay­ments, for­cing private dair­ies to revise rates upward.

Yet, pleas to revive a cooper­at­ive dairy struc­ture remain unheard.

“Dur­ing the cooper­at­ive era, Chit­toor was known as Andhra’s Anand. That tag will remain his­tory if no action is taken to revive it,” says Krish­nappa Mani (62) of Pala­maner.

Fod­der, other short­ages

As a rain­depend­ent and partly rain­shadow region, Chit­toor faces chronic fod­der short­ages, espe­cially in east­ern man­dals. Sum­mer heat from March to August reduces yields and fer­til­ity.

Offi­cials estim­ate a 30–35% green fod­der short­fall dur­ing sum­mer, with fod­der prices rising by 25–30% and milk yields drop­ping 20–30%.

While fod­der con­di­tions are rel­at­ively bet­ter in Kup­pam and Pala­maner, man­dals such as Nagari, G.D. Nel­lore and S.R. Puram remain vul­ner­able.

“We face short­ages of veter­in­ari­ans, delayed emer­gency care and lim­ited access to afford­able insur­ance,” says Jhansi (50), a farmer from Nagari.

On the other hand, youth par­ti­cip­a­tion too remains uncer­tain. Many view dairy as labour­intens­ive with uncer­tain returns. In some vil­lages, house­holds are quietly exit­ing the sec­tor, even though schemes pro­mot­ing fod­der crops, sil­age pre­par­a­tion and com­munity fod­der banks have been rolled out and over 2,000 cattle sheds sanc­tioned.

The road ahead

Animal Hus­bandry offi­cials project that Chit­toor could scale up to 30 lakh litres per day by the end of the dec­ade through improved breeds, expan­ded chilling infra­struc­ture and organ­ised pro­cure­ment.

Kup­pam alone con­trib­utes over eight lakh litres daily, and offi­cials say milk out­put there could rise by another 10 lakh litres soon.

Respond­ing to farm­ers’ con­cerns, Dr. D. Uma Maheswari, Joint Dir­ector, Animal Hus­bandry, Chit­toor, says a multi­pronged strategy has been adop­ted to give the sec­tor the much­needed push.

“We are strength­en­ing veter­in­ary ser­vices, expand­ing arti­fi­cial insem­in­a­tion using sex­sor­ted and high­genetic merit semen, improv­ing feed secur­ity and cre­at­ing robust mar­ket link­ages,” she says.The focus, she adds, is on secur­ing live­li­hoods while main­tain­ing Chit­toor’s pos­i­tion as one of Andhra Pra­desh’s lead­ing milk­pro­du­cing dis­tricts.

Even as urban centres across Ray­alaseema and Tamil Nadu con­tinue to depend on Chit­toor’s milk, farm­ers pose a fun­da­mental ques­tion: “Can a dis­trict that feeds mil­lions afford to let its dairy house­holds run at a loss?’’

As Chandrasekhar (35) of Irala man­dal puts it across, ‘’The real meas­ure of suc­cess is not litres pro­duced, but secure live­li­hoods and a future worth striv­ing for.”

Source : Dairynews7x7 Jan 13th 2026 The Hindu

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