Highest per capita availability in country at 1,181 gm per day.

The average milk yield in Punjab increased by 50.14 per cent between years 2012 and 2019, as per the figures of the livestock census 2019, Department of Animal Husbandry. The state now has the highest per capita milk availability in the country at 1,181 gm per day against the national average of 394 gm.

The average milk yield per cattle head was 3.51 kg in 2012. It rose to 5.27 kg in 2019. Currently, the state produces 345 lakh kg of milk per day. Significantly, the annual milk yield in the state went up from 107.74 lakh tonnes in 2016 to 126 lakh tonnes in 2019.

While the number of buffaloes fell from 51 lakh to about 40 lakh between 2012-2019, that of cows increased from 24.27 lakh to 25.18 lakh during the same period. On the increased milk production, the Director, Mission Tandrust, KS Pannu, says: “The main reason has been the emergence of high-tech commercial dairy farming in the past decade.” The state has more than 10,000 high-tech dairy farms under the umbrella of Punjab Progressive Dairy Farmers Association.

Vice Chancellor of Guru Angad Dev Veterinary and Animal Sciences University Dr Amarjit Singh Nanda says healthy diet and upgraded medical care has vastly contributed to the rise in milk production. “The sperm used for reproduction is very healthy. Preserved green fodder (silage) is given to animals for three-four months after the weather turns dry. The buffalo count has slipped as unfit and non-milk producing heads are taken for culling”, he explained.

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