Government to offer incentive on exports of milk products

The government is considering incentivising exports of milkproducts, adding milk to mid-day meal rations as well as reducing GST and increasing import duty on certain products as it seeks ways to ensure better returns for dairy farmers.

On Tuesday, the Centre convened a high-level inter-ministerial meeting under transport minister Nitin Gadkari to discuss these measures, even as a strike by dairy farmers in Maharashtra continued for the second day. Railway minister Piyush Goyal, who also holds the finance and coal portfolios, Amul managing director RS Sodhi, Maharashtra State Commission of Agricultural Costs and Prices Centre chairman Pasha Patel attended the meeting, with agriculture minister Radha Mohan Singh joining in through videoconferencing.
Gadkari will hold another meeting on Wednesday with external affairs minister Sushma Swaraj, human resource development minister Prakash Javadekar, minister for women and child development Maneka Gandhi and the agriculture and railways ministers to finalise the measures.

“Today, along with union ministers Radha Mohan Singh and Piyush Goyal and officials we discussed challenges faced in the milk production sector. We have decided to offer a 10% incentive on exports of milk and milk products. Tomorrow, we will meet again to explore available options,” Gadkari tweeted. Later, he said they were also looking at providing milk products as a part of midday meals at schools.

“States would soon be asked to come on board. Also, there are a lot of countries that receive grants from India. Some of these have shortage of milk. We could offer them milk powder as a part of grant. We are finding out ways to push the retail demand of milk.

I urge people to replace cold drinks with milk,” Gadkari told reporters. Sources said they also considered cutting GST on ghee and butter to 5% from 12% and increasing import duty on lactose to 60% from 40%. Government officials said dairy cooperatives have a stock of more 1.5 lakh tonnes of skimmed milk powder — used for preparing liquid milk in the summer when supplies are short — and they could easily export 50,000 tonnes if an export subsidy was given, helping firming domestic prices.

Meanwhile, in Maharashtra, government officials said the Swabhimani Shetkari Sangthana’s (SSS) milk-supply-stoppage call didn’t affect supplies to consumers on Tuesday. However, in some pockets of Pune, there were reports of milk shortages. “I could get only half a litre pouch though I wanted a litre,” said Manoj Kelkar, a Pune resident. As an emergency measure, milk was brought in by train and by tankers under police protection to Mumbai. “We have stock of 80 lakh litres with major dairies in Mumbai,” said an official requesting not to be named.

The situation was worse on Monday when, according to state officials, milk coming to Mumbai dropped by about 60% with only 40 lakh litres reaching the city. The agitation by dairy farmers began days after the government announced an upward revision in the minimum support price for food grain to help double farmers’ income.

On Tuesday, arrest warrants and notices were issued against prominent SSS leaders like Ravikant Tupkar and Prakash Pokale, even as the organisation vowed to intensify the strike.

SSS leader and MP Raju Shetty himself was camping through the day on Maharashtra’s border with Gujarat. “We sent back 20 Gujarat tankers on Tuesday,” SSS spokesperson Yogesh Pande said. Activists were using guerrilla tactics to attack milk tankers even as the government deployed heavy security in the Sangli Kolhapur base of the SSS.

The organisation is firm on carrying on the agitation till the government accepts its demand of giving a subsidy of Rs 5 a litre to farmers. “The government has announced a subsidy of Rs50 a litre for export of milk powder. It translates to Rs 5 a litre. Along with the earlier subsidy of Rs 3 a litre being given for milk powder export, the powder manufacturing dairies are getting subsidy of Rs 8 a litre and paying farmers only Rs 16 a litre,” said Pande.