The dairy sector in Jammu and Kashmir is no longer just about litres and litres of milk; it is about whether governance can convert abundance into empowerment. The recent appraisal of the new roadmap is significant not because it repeats familiar statistics, but because it exposes a paradox that has long gone unaddressed: 80 lakh litres produced daily, only 4 lakh litres processed. This is not a success story; it is a bottleneck that drains value from farmers and keeps the sector locked in subsistence.
What makes this moment different is the government’s insistence on measuring outcomes of interventions already underway under HADP and borrowing lessons from states that have succeeded. Gujarat’s cooperative revolution and Karnataka’s processing networks are not just models; they are reminders of what J&K has failed to build so far. Coordination with the National Dairy Development Board could be transformative, but only if it results in real infrastructure, empowered cooperatives, and market access rather than token partnerships.
With per capita availability at 577 grams per day and a projected growth rate of 6.55% CAGR, milk production is expected to reach 50.74 million tonnes by 2031-32. This positions J&K among the most promising dairy regions in India. For rural households, especially women and youth, dairy farming offers steady income, nutritional security, and dignity. Yet the risks are equally stark. Without cold chains, processing plants, and organized cooperatives, farmers remain vulnerable to market fluctuations and exploitation. Environmental sustainability is another blind spot; rapid expansion without safeguards could strain water resources and create waste management crises.
In the Valley, milk is more than an economic commodity—it is woven into the rhythm of daily life and cultural identity. From morning ‘nun chai’ (salt tea) to festive gatherings, dairy sustains households and traditions alike. Yet the paradox remains: while Kashmir’s lush pastures and cool climate make it naturally suited for dairy, the absence of modern processing units means that much of this abundance never translates into prosperity for farmers. Harnessing the Valley’s unique geography and heritage, and aligning it with infrastructure and cooperative strength, could turn milk into both a livelihood engine and a symbol of resilience for communities long seeking stability and dignity.
The government’s role must therefore be more than supervisory. It must act as a catalyst; building infrastructure, incentivizing private investment, and ensuring that cooperatives are not hollow shells but genuine farmer-led institutions. Training, veterinary coverage, fodder availability, and digital platforms for transparent pricing are areas that demand urgent attention. Equally important is inclusivity: dairy development must reach remote areas, where it can serve as a stabilizing livelihood.
The real news value lies in the crossroads at which J&K stands. This is not just about milk; it is about whether governance can transform a sector into a driver of rural prosperity. The roadmap is ambitious, but ambition without execution will only deepen frustration. If the gaps in processing, value-addition, and farmer support are bridged, J&K could move from being a producer to a processor and exporter, reshaping its economic identity. If not, the sector risks becoming another tale of squandered opportunity.
The dairy story in J&K is therefore more than an agricultural narrative; it is a test of political will, institutional capacity, and social vision. Milk in the Valley is not just nourishment; it is a measure of whether policy can deliver dignity and transformation.

