Business Standard

Maharashtr­a milk farmers begin strike

- DILIP KUMAR JHA

Farmers in Maharashtr­a came on the streets, disrupting milk supply to major cities, including the state capital, in protest against a sharp fall in the prices they get.

The stir, called by the Swabhimani Shetkari Sanghatana (SSS), is to press for a minimum ~5 a litre of subsidy to milk farmers in the state and a minimum sale price of cow milk at ~30 a litre.

Around 70 per cent of the 165 million tonnes of milk produced across India in a year is consumed directly in liquid form. The remaining 30 per cent is processed into products such as cheese, butter, skimmed milk powder, etc.

“Apart from returning hundreds of milk vans to corporate-owned chilling centres, protesting farmers vandalised nearly 60 vehicles all across the state. They have stopped supply to corporateo­wned chilling centres and bulk dealers,” said Yogesh Pande, spokespers­on, SSS.

He claims dairy farmers are forced to sell milk in Maharashtr­a at ~16-17 a litre, while branded bottled water fetches ~20 a litre. Some months earlier, dairy companies were offering ~26-27 a litre.

Government­s in Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh have been paying a subsidy of up to ~5 a litre to milk farmers but the government of Maharashtr­a has so far not accepted this demand, Early this year, around 20,000 milk farmers walked to Mumbai from Pune to press for this. A subsidy of ~5 a litre for cow milk is estimated to cost the government ~4 billion annually.

“Today being the first day of the protest, the impact was minimal. Packaged cow milk sold to consumers on Monday was supplied to stockists and retailers the previous day. The impact of this protest would be severe from Tuesday,” said Pande.

SSS, led by Lok Sabha member Raju Shetti, claims to have support across the board from bodies involved in the milk business.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India