Gomini, a Bihar-based startup founded by Arjun Sharma and Gauri Shankar Maheshwari in 2025, is attempting to bridge the urban-rural divide by making cow preservation (especially indigenous breeds) commercially viable. The broader Indian dairy market was valued at nearly ₹19 lakh crore in 2024 (per IMARC) and Gomini sees opportunity in the lack of scalable, sustainable models for gaushalas (cow shelters), which traditionally have struggled with funding and maintaining indigenous breeds. The startup is using a decentralized model where small farmer families are aided with cows, feed, capital, and then grouped into clusters (through farmer producer organisations or FPOs) once enough families are onboarded; at the village level, value-added dairy products (ghee, A2 whey, butter, soaps etc.) are produced locally.
Gomini also introduces an urban fractional ownership concept: city/urban investors (“Cow Guardians”, “Heritage Partners”, “Cowvestors”) can invest in cows or clusters of cows. For example, owning one or two cows costs ~ ₹4.2 lakh per cow for the “Guardian” model, with expected returns (and monthly A2 product deliveries) and targeting ~ 13% CAGR. Higher tiers (clusters of 5-99 cows or 100+) require larger investment (₹20 lakh up to > ₹4 crore), with profit-sharing, impact reports etc. Profit distribution is structured: farmers get ~55%, urban adopters ~25%, Gomini ~10%, and remaining goes to charity for abandoned/injured cows.
In its early phase, Gomini onboarded ~ 500 farmers and supported the building of 200+ sustainable gaushalas. Farmer incomes have reportedly gone up by 20-30% because of the model (through transparent profit-sharing and reduced reliance on intermediaries). The founders also plan to expand their direct-to-consumer (D2C)-branded product portfolio in the near future.
Industry Insight:
Gomini’s model exemplifies broader trends in the dairy / animal-husbandry sector: combining technology (AI, IoT, blockchain) + value chain integration + consumer interest in sustainable / ethical / indigenous breed products. The fractional ownership model allows urban capital to flow into rural livelihoods, potentially creating better incentives for breed conservation, reducing middlemen, and increasing farmer incomes. If scaled, this could challenge conventional dairy cooperatives and industrial dairy farms by offering differentiated products (A2, organic, indigenous breeds) and creating stronger traceability.
Source : Dairynews7x7 Oct 7th 2025 Read full story here