The Hindu (Kolkata)

Dairy farmers’ struggle for survival

Drought has hit dairy farmers hard in many districts of Karnataka, where cows have been the source of sustenance even when crops have failed. Sharath S. Srivatsa reports on what farmers have to say and how the State-run milk co-operative KMF has responded

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avi., a dairy farmer in Keelara village in Mandya district in the heart of the Old Mysore region, has been able to earn a supplement­ary income from the cows that he rears and from the paddy he cultivates. However, the long spell of drought since last year forced him to sell two cows about six months ago because fodder has become dicult to procure.

He now has one cow to ensure milk supply to his own family and he is able to sell only a couple of extra litres to the local milk co-operative society. Though he has a borewell, the water yield has reduced so drasticall­y that he cannot even grow green fodder. Purchasing fodder is out of the question because it is too expensive.

There are similar stories across Mandya, Kolar, Tumakuru, and Bengaluru Rural districts, which contribute the bulk of the Karnataka Milk Federation’s (KMF) milk procuremen­t, along with Hassan, Mysuru, and Shivamogga districts.

In Karnataka, about 24 lakh dairy farmers are members of village-level milk cooperativ­e societies, and an unspeci‹ed number of non-members also rear cows in the State. The Old Mysuru region in south Karnataka has seen growth in milk production since the milk revolution started

Rin the mid-70s. A‘ected by the vagaries of monsoon in rain-dependent arid and irrigated areas, dairy farming has brought supplement­ary income to the farming community, and women’s participat­ion is also high.

The failed monsoon in 2023, which led to crop loss, has reduced post-harvest hay availabili­ty, while water scarcity has prevented farmers from growing green fodder, triggering a shortage of cow feed. Though the State government issued fodder kits containing seeds to farmers as a drought-mitigation measure, farmers complained that without water, the kit remained unused, and the green fodder wilted in many cases.

Karnataka is currently facing the worst drought in the last four decades, with 223 of the 236 taluks in the State being declared drought-hit. While the previous monsoon’s bountiful rainfall helped ‹ll lakes and improve groundwate­r, which sustained farmers’ lives, the onset of summer has brought misery to rural households as a large number of water bodies and borewells have dried up or yielded less water.

Delay in incentive release

Added to their problem is the delay in releasing the government incentive of ”5 per litre. The government released the last tranche in November 2023, and farmers were hoping to use the subsidy, which was expected later, to counter drought-related ‹nancial distress.

Since 2008, the State government has been providing incentives to dairy farmers, and the incentive has increased from ”2 per litre when it was launched to ”5 per litre now. The aid has helped draw more farmers to dairy farming, as milk procuremen­t has more than doubled from 2008, when the average daily procuremen­t was 36 lakh kg, to about 81 lakh kg by the end of the 2022-23 ‹nancial year.

While the government incentive does not have speci‹c timelines for release, dairy farmers get their regular payment for milk from the KMF through their respective milk unions. Based on the ‹nancial strength of the union, the milk procuremen­t price per litre also varies from district to district. This payment comes to farmers fortnightl­y through direct bene‹t transfers to their bank accounts.

“A 50 kg bag of dry feed sold by KMF costs ”1,260. A tractor load of fodder can cost anywhere from ”5,000 to ”10,000. Only farmers who have fodder in excess are selling it. The government has delayed subsidy payments. Enough water and fodder are not available. To make matters worse, milk yield from cows has reduced because of heat,” Jayakumar, a farmer in Gejjalgere in Mandya, pointed out.

In arid Kolar, where farmers are even more dependent on dairy farming to boost their income, the drying up of borewells — the only source of water — has added to the misery. A resident of Siddanahal­li in Bangarpet of Kolar district, Thulasi Kumar, said he reduced the cattle head from four to two. “Extreme heat has led to low yield of milk from cows, and thereby a drop in income,” he said.

Low milk procuremen­t

A 50-year-old, reasonably sized milk cooperativ­e society in the temple town of Melukote, in Mandya district, has been recording low milk procuremen­t since March end. From 14 cans of around 40 litres each, it has come down to eight or nine cans daily.

Those in the know about developmen­ts in the dairy industry say farmers began selling cows last year as dairying became unremunera­tive. One reason was the delay in increasing the procuremen­t price. KMF has been making multiple proposals to increase the retail price of milk since the BJP government. Finally, in July last year, the current Congress government allowed a hike in retail price by ”3 per litre in July 2023, most of which is transferre­d to the farmers.

The BJP government was said to have delayed a price increase during an election year, fearing a backlash from the middle class. KMF sources said it was during that period that farmers resorted to selling cows because of increased input costs and dipping incomes. In July 2023, when the retail price was ‹nally increased, the KMF had justi‹ed that despite the retail price hike, milk prices in Karnataka continued to be cheaper than in the neighbouri­ng states.

(With additional inputs by Jahanvi T.R.)

 ?? BHAGYA PRAKASH K. ?? Milk being taken by farmers to a co-operative society in Malur village, Channapatn­a taluk, Ramanagara district.
BHAGYA PRAKASH K. Milk being taken by farmers to a co-operative society in Malur village, Channapatn­a taluk, Ramanagara district.
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