White Revolution – Legacy IAS | UPSC Study Material
🏛️ Legacy IAS – Bangalore
White Revolution & Operation Flood
Comprehensive UPSC Study Material with Current Affairs, PYQs & Practice MCQs
📋 GS Paper III🥛 Prelims + Mains📰 Updated 2025–26🧑🌾 Verghese Kurien✍️ 3 Mock Mains✅ 5 Practice MCQs
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UPSC Relevance
White Revolution appears in GS Paper III (Agriculture, Food Security, Rural Development). Linked with Green Revolution, cooperative movement, women empowerment, and nutrition security. Expect 1–2 Prelims MCQs per cycle and Mains questions linking it to cooperatives, rural development, and food security.
1. White Revolution — Overview
The White Revolution refers to the massive increase in milk production in India, achieved through cooperative dairy development under Operation Flood (1970). It transformed India from a milk-deficient nation to the world's largest milk producer.
1970
Launch of Operation Flood (NDDB)
17 MT
Milk production in 1950–51
239 MT
Milk production 2023–24 (record)
#1
India — world's largest milk producer
8.5 Cr
People employed in dairy sector
NDDB
National Dairy Development Board (1965)
Key Definition: The White Revolution (also known as Operation Flood) is a package programme adopted to increase milk production in India. It was launched in 1970 by the National Dairy Development Board (NDDB) under the leadership of Prof. Verghese Kurien — called the "Father of the White Revolution" and "Milkman of India."
🥛 Key Personalities
Prof. Verghese Kurien: Father of White Revolution; architect of Operation Flood; Chairman of NDDB
PM Lal Bahadur Shastri: Appointed Kurien as NDDB Chairman; championed "Jai Kisan"
Tribhuvandas Patel: Founder of Kaira District Cooperative Milk Producers' Union (Amul)
H.M. Dalaya: Developed skimmed milk powder technology — key to Amul's success
📋 Key Institutions
NDDB (National Dairy Development Board) — set up 1965, Anand, Gujarat
Amul (GCMMF): Gujarat Cooperative Milk Marketing Federation; global benchmark
NCA: National Cooperative Academy
ICAR – NDRI: National Dairy Research Institute, Karnal (R&D hub)
DARE: Department of Animal Husbandry & Dairying — nodal Ministry
Figure 1: India's milk production journey — from 17 MT (1950) to 239 MT (2024), the largest growth in any agricultural sector
2. Operation Flood — The Engine of White Revolution
Operation Flood was the world's largest dairy development programme, creating a nationwide milk grid linking rural producers with urban consumers through cooperative societies.
What was Operation Flood? Launched in 1970 by NDDB under Dr. Verghese Kurien, it created a massive link between Rural Milk Producers and Urban Consumers by eliminating middlemen. The cooperative model — based on the Amul template from Anand, Gujarat — was replicated across India.
Three Phases of Operation Flood
Phase I — 1970 to 1980
Organised dairy sector established in 4 metropolitan cities (Mumbai, Chennai, Delhi, Kolkata). Rural milk production networks built. Funded by the sale of butter oil and skimmed milk powder donated by the European Economic Community (EEC) channelled through the World Food Programme. Established milk sheds in rural areas to feed metropolitan demand.
Phase II — 1981 to 1985
Expanded to 136 milk sheds and 290 urban milk supply outlets. Covered over 42 lakh producers. Infrastructure expanded to secondary cities and rural areas. Cooperative network strengthened with processing plants.
Phase III — 1985 to 1996
Strengthened infrastructure for large-scale production. Emphasis on R&D, veterinary health services, artificial insemination, and cattle feed supply. Resulted in India achieving self-sufficiency in milk and becoming world's largest producer. Established research centres at Anand, Mehsana, Palanpur, Siliguri, Jalandhar, and Erode.
Amul — The Model: Amul (Anand Milk Union Limited), founded in 1946 by Tribhuvandas Patel under Verghese Kurien's management, is the world's largest cooperative dairy. Its three-tier structure — village cooperative → district union → state federation (GCMMF) — was the template replicated across India through Operation Flood. Today Amul covers 3.6 million farmers and exports to 50+ countries.
3. Objectives of the White Revolution
🥛 Milk Production
Milk-deficit → surplus nation
Increase per capita availability
Reduce import dependency
Ensure year-round availability
🏘️ Rural Linkage
Eliminate middlemen
Direct rural–urban connect
Milk sheds & urban outlets
Chilling centres in villages
🐄 Cattle Improvement
Veterinary health services
Artificial insemination
Cross-breeding programmes
Cattle feed distribution
👩 Women Empowerment
Women as primary dairy workers
Economic independence
Cooperative membership
Decision-making in household
🏭 Infrastructure
Processing plants
Cold chain logistics
Transportation network
Dairy product marketing
🍼 Nutrition Security
Milk to urban poor
Combat malnutrition
Per capita availability target
School milk programmes
4. Significance & Achievements of the White Revolution
India ranks #1 globally in milk production. Output rose from 17 MT (1950–51) to 239 MT (2023–24) — a 14x increase. Per capita milk availability rose from 125g/day (pre-WR) to 471g/day (2023–24) — exceeding the WHO-recommended 280g/day. India accounts for about 24.76% of global milk production. Top producing states: UP (16.21%), Rajasthan (14.51%), MP (8.91%), Gujarat (7.65%), and Maharashtra (6.71%) — together ~54% of national output.
The dairy sector provides employment to over 8.5 crore people directly — primarily small, marginal, and landless farmers. Around 14 million farmers are covered by 1,35,439 village-level dairy cooperative societies. Dairy income provides a steady supplementary income — particularly important during crop failures. It has reduced rural-to-urban migration in states like Gujarat, Punjab, and Rajasthan.
Women form over 70% of dairy workforce — milking, cattle care, cooperative membership. White Revolution gave women independent income, cooperative membership rights, and social status. Self-Help Group (SHG)-linked dairy cooperatives in Maharashtra, Gujarat, and Rajasthan have transformed gender dynamics in rural households. Kurien famously said: "When you empower a dairy farmer, you empower a woman."
India achieved self-sufficiency in milk — ending imports of skimmed milk powder. Milk and dairy products are critical protein and calcium sources, especially for vegetarian populations. India's dairy sector has helped combat malnutrition. School Milk Programmes, PM POSHAN (mid-day meals), and ICDS use dairy products for child nutrition. India is now a net exporter of dairy products — SMP, butter, ghee to ASEAN, Middle East.
Operation Flood created India's largest cooperative network. The Amul (GCMMF) model — three-tier structure of village cooperative → district union → state federation — has been replicated across India. It eliminates exploitative middlemen, ensures fair prices to farmers and affordable prices to consumers. Amul's group turnover reached ₹80,000 crore (FY2024) and GCMMF alone crossed ₹65,911 crore (FY2025). Ministry of Cooperation (created 2021) now aims to scale cooperative dairy to every district.
Indicator
Before White Revolution
After White Revolution (Present)
Milk production
17 MT (1950–51)
239 MT (2023–24)
Global rank
Milk-deficit, importing
#1 globally (24% of world output)
Per capita availability
125 g/day
471 g/day (2023–24); was 459 g/day in 2022–23
Dairy employment
Negligible organised sector
8.5 crore people employed
Cooperative societies
Amul alone (1946)
1,35,439 village-level cooperatives
Import dependency
High (SMP, butter imports)
Net dairy product exporter
5. Challenges Facing India's Dairy Sector
Despite transformative achievements, the White Revolution faces significant modern challenges that demand a White Revolution 2.0:
Milk production growth rate has declined from 6.47% (2018–19) to 3.83% (2022–23) and further to 3.78% (2023–24). The slowdown is attributed to rising input costs, fodder shortage, animal disease outbreaks (Lumpy Skin Disease 2022), and climate stress on cattle in arid zones.
Nearly 63% of milk marketed remains in the unorganised sector — local vendors, informal traders. This creates hygiene risks, no price discovery for farmers, and limited value addition. Formalising the dairy supply chain is a major policy challenge.
Focus on cross-breed (8.55 kg/animal/day) and exotic breeds over indigenous breeds (3.44 kg/animal/day) has led to a sharp decline in native cattle populations. Indigenous breeds (Gir, Sahiwal, Tharparkar) are better adapted to Indian climate, need less water, and resist local diseases — but their population is declining rapidly.
Livestock contribute 32% of India's methane emissions (from enteric fermentation and manure). Climate change threatens fodder availability, water access for cattle, and increases heat stress. Overgrazing and water-intensive fodder crops degrade land in arid zones (Rajasthan, Gujarat).
Retail milk prices have risen from ₹42 to ₹60+ per litre in recent years — making it unaffordable for poor urban consumers. Meanwhile, farmer gate prices remain low, squeezing producer margins. This classic market distortion is worsened by high transportation and cold chain costs.
Huge yield disparity: Punjab yields 13.49 kg/animal/day while West Bengal yields only 6.30 kg/animal/day. North and West India dominate; Eastern and North-Eastern states are underserved. NE India has virtually no organised dairy cooperative infrastructure.
6. White Revolution 2.0
To address current challenges, the Ministry of Cooperation has introduced the Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) for White Revolution 2.0 — a comprehensive upgrade of India's dairy sector.
White Revolution 2.0 — Key Goals:
• Target milk procurement of 100 million kg/day within 5 years
• Strengthen cooperative infrastructure across all districts
• Focus on women farmer participation and self-help group integration
• Improve genetics via Artificial Insemination, Embryo Transfer, Genetic Modification
• Expand dairy exports — target top 3 global dairy exporters
• Reduce input costs while maximising production
🏛️ Policy Instruments (2024–25)
PM Rashtriya Pashu Arogya Yojana: Universal cattle vaccination and health coverage
National Livestock Mission: Breed improvement, fodder development
PMFBY Livestock Insurance: Extended to dairy cattle
Ministry of Cooperation (2021): Dedicated ministry to scale Amul model
e-Gopala App: Digital platform for livestock management
🔬 Technology Interventions
Artificial Insemination: Sex-sorted semen technology to get 90% female calves
Embryo Transfer: High-genetic bulls to scale superior breeds
Genetic Improvement: National Bovine Genomic Centre for superior breeds
IoT Sensors: Automated milking machines, health monitoring in large dairies
Lumpy Skin Disease Vaccine: ICAR developed indigenous vaccine (2023)
Methane Reduction: Feed additives and biogas from cattle waste
💡 Mnemonic — White Revolution Key Facts (VANCO-OP)
Verghese Kurien · Anand (NDDB HQ) · NDDB (1965) · Cooperative model · Operation Flood (1970) · Outcomes: 239 MT milk · Phases: I (1970–80), II (1981–85), III (1985–96)
7. Current Affairs 2024–25 — White Revolution & Dairy Sector
Data — 2024
DAHD Annual Report 2023–24
India's Milk Production Hits All-Time High — 239 MT in 2023–24
India produced 239.30 million tonnes of milk in 2023–24, maintaining its position as the world's largest milk producer. Per capita milk availability rose to 471 grams/day in 2023–24 (up from 459 g/day in 2022–23) — well above the WHO-recommended 280g/day. India now contributes 24.76% of global milk production. Top states: UP (16.21%), Rajasthan (14.51%), MP (8.91%), Gujarat (7.65%), and Maharashtra (6.71%).
Scheme — 2025
Ministry of Cooperation | 2025
White Revolution 2.0 — Standard Operating Procedures (Margdarshika) Launched
The Ministry of Cooperation released the White Revolution 2.0 Margdarshika (SOPs) targeting milk procurement of 100 million kg/day within 5 years. Key pillars: expanding cooperative coverage to all districts (currently only 33% of India's 6.5 lakh villages have dairy cooperatives), enhancing women farmer participation to 60%, and increasing dairy exports to $4 billion by 2030.
Crisis — 2022–23
2022 | Lumpy Skin Disease (LSD) Outbreak
Lumpy Skin Disease — Biggest Threat to White Revolution Gains
Lumpy Skin Disease (LSD), a viral disease, affected over 2 crore cattle in 2022, killing 1.5 lakh animals — the worst livestock epidemic in decades. Rajasthan, Gujarat, and Punjab (the heartland of White Revolution) were worst hit. ICAR developed India's first indigenous LSD vaccine (Lumpi-ProVac) in 2023. The outbreak exposed the vulnerability of India's unvaccinated cattle population and the need for universal livestock health coverage.
Data — 2025
NDDB / Amul | FY 2024–25
Amul Group Crosses ₹80,000 Crore Turnover — Cooperative Power Demonstrated
The group turnover of Brand Amul reached ₹80,000 crore in FY2023–24 (up from ₹72,000 crore in FY2022–23). GCMMF alone (the marketing arm) recorded ₹59,545 crore in FY2024, rising to ₹65,911 crore in FY2025. Amul exports dairy products to over 50 countries and directly benefits 3.6 million milk producer members across 18,600 villages of Gujarat. The Amul model is cited by the UN and FAO as the gold standard for inclusive agricultural cooperatives globally.
Policy — 2024
DAHD | 2024
National Dairy Plan II — ₹1,790 Crore for Breed Improvement & Milk Supply Chain
National Dairy Plan Phase II, operational from 2022, with a ₹1,790 crore outlay focuses on: (1) high-yielding breed development through AI coverage in 600 districts; (2) cold chain infrastructure in 80+ dairy-deficit districts; (3) strengthening dairy cooperative infrastructure in Eastern India (Bihar, Odisha, WB, NE) — regions bypassed by original White Revolution. Target: 8% annual milk production growth by 2027.
Technology — 2024
NDDB | 2024
e-Gopala & National Digital Livestock Mission — Tech-Driven Dairy Sector
e-Gopala App (launched 2020, scaled 2024) now has over 1 crore registered livestock owners. It provides direct farmer-to-buyer marketplace for cattle, AI service locators, veterinary telemedicine, and feed/fodder information. The National Digital Livestock Mission aims to create a unified digital identity (Pashu Aadhaar) for each animal — enabling targeted vaccination, insurance, and subsidy delivery.
8. Prelims PYQs — White Revolution & Dairy Sector
Prelims2022
Q1. With reference to the White Revolution in India, which of the following statements is/are correct? 1. It was launched under the leadership of Prof. Verghese Kurien. 2. Its headquarters was at the National Dairy Development Board (NDDB) in Anand, Gujarat. 3. It aimed to create a nationwide milk grid linking rural producers with urban consumers.
(a) 1 only
(b) 1 and 2 only
✓ (c) 1, 2 and 3
(d) 2 and 3 only
All three statements are correct. Prof. Verghese Kurien was the architect of Operation Flood (White Revolution). NDDB was established in 1965 at Anand, Gujarat — the home of Amul cooperative — and this remains its headquarters. The core objective was to create a national milk grid linking rural producers to urban consumers through a cooperative chain, eliminating middlemen. Key Takeaway: Anand, NDDB, Kurien, and 1970 (launch) are the four anchors for UPSC.
Prelims2020
Q2. "Operation Flood" launched in 1970, was related to which of the following?
(a) Increasing wheat production across India
(b) Providing flood relief to farmers in Bihar and UP
✓ (c) Increasing milk production and creating a national milk grid
(d) Providing irrigation facilities to drought-prone districts
Operation Flood (1970) was the world's largest dairy development programme aimed at increasing milk production and creating a nationwide milk grid by linking rural dairy cooperatives with urban milk consumers. It was launched by NDDB under Verghese Kurien. India transformed from a milk-deficit nation to the world's largest producer. Note: Do not confuse "Operation Flood" with disaster management — it is entirely about dairy development.
Prelims2019
Q3. With reference to Amul (GCMMF), consider the following statements: 1. Amul follows a three-tier cooperative structure. 2. It was founded by Verghese Kurien in 1946. 3. GCMMF stands for Gujarat Cooperative Milk Marketing Federation.
(a) 1 only
✓ (b) 1 and 3 only
(c) 2 and 3 only
(d) All three
Statements 1 and 3 are correct. Statement 2 is wrong — Amul was founded by Tribhuvandas Patel in 1946. Verghese Kurien joined later (1949) as general manager and was the key technical and management architect. GCMMF (Gujarat Cooperative Milk Marketing Federation) is correct. The three-tier structure: Village → District Cooperative Union → State Federation (GCMMF) is the Amul model replicated nationally. Tip: Distinguish Kurien's role (manager/architect) from Tribhuvandas Patel's role (founder).
Prelims2018
Q4. India is the world's largest producer of which of the following?
(a) Sugar
(b) Rice
✓ (c) Milk
(d) Groundnut
India is the world's largest producer of milk — a direct outcome of the White Revolution. India accounts for ~24% of global milk output. India is 2nd largest in rice, sugar (by output — Brazil is #1 producer of sugarcane), and groundnut (China is #1). Key Global Rankings for UPSC: Milk (#1), Pulses (#1), Jute (#1), Buffalo meat (#1), Tea (#2), Rice (#2), Wheat (#2), Sugarcane (#2).
Prelims2016
Q5. "Milkman of India" is the title associated with which of the following personalities?
(a) M.S. Swaminathan
(b) Norman Borlaug
✓ (c) Verghese Kurien
(d) Tribhuvandas Patel
Verghese Kurien is called the "Milkman of India" and the "Father of the White Revolution in India." He was chairman of NDDB for 33 years, designed Operation Flood, and built Amul into a global brand. M.S. Swaminathan is the Father of the Indian Green Revolution. Norman Borlaug is the Father of the Global Green Revolution. Tribhuvandas Patel founded the Kaira Cooperative (Amul). Key UPSC distinction: Kurien = White/Dairy; Swaminathan = Green/Grain.
9. Mains PYQs — White Revolution
Mains2017GS Paper III
Q1. Explain various types of revolutions that took place in agriculture after Independence in India. How have these revolutions helped in poverty alleviation and food security in India? (250 words)
White Revolution's Role (within the broader answer):
Introduction: Post-independence India witnessed a series of agricultural revolutions. The White Revolution (dairy) alongside the Green Revolution (grains) and Blue Revolution (fisheries) transformed India's food economy.
White Revolution — Contribution to Food Security:
• Milk production: 17 MT (1950) → 239 MT (2024) — largest growth in any food sector
• Per capita availability: 125g/day → 471g/day (2023–24) — exceeded WHO recommendation
• India: #1 global milk producer; nutritional security improved
• PDS and ICDS include dairy products for nutrition supplementation
White Revolution — Contribution to Poverty Alleviation:
• 8.5 crore people employed in dairy sector — mostly rural poor
• Women's empowerment: 70%+ dairy workforce are women; cooperative income = financial independence
• Small/marginal farmers: 14 million farmers in 1,35,000+ cooperatives
• Steady supplementary income during crop failures — crucial safety net
• Rural non-farm economy: milk processing, transportation, cold chain jobs
Cooperative Model (Amul): Three-tier structure eliminates middlemen; farmers get fair prices; consumers get affordable milk. Amul model = world benchmark. Group turnover ₹80,000 crore (FY2024).
Challenges: Growth rate slowing (3.83% in 2022–23; 3.78% in 2023–24); unorganised sector dominance (63%); regional disparities; climate threats.
Conclusion: White Revolution 2.0 (SOP Margdarshika) must sustain gains while ensuring ecological sustainability and geographic equity.
Mains2019GS Paper III
Q2. "Cooperative societies in rural India have played a transformative role in agricultural marketing and rural development." Discuss with reference to the dairy sector. (150 words)
Introduction: The cooperative model — exemplified by Amul (GCMMF) — is India's most successful experiment in agricultural marketing reform.
Role of Dairy Cooperatives:
• Eliminating middlemen: Farmers receive 75–80% of consumer price (vs 30–40% without cooperatives)
• Market access: 1,35,439 village cooperatives link small farmers to urban markets
• Price stability: Cooperative procurement provides assured price floor regardless of season
• Value addition: Cooperatives process milk into butter, ghee, cheese, SMP — higher margins
• Women empowerment: SHG-linked dairy cooperatives (especially in Gujarat, Maharashtra) give women income autonomy
• Rural development: Cold chain, transportation, veterinary services funded by cooperatives — multiplier effect
Amul as Gold Standard: Three-tier structure; Group turnover ₹80,000 crore (FY2024); 3.6 million farmers.
Way Forward: Ministry of Cooperation (2021) aims to replicate Amul in Eastern India and tribal regions — where cooperative dairy coverage is under 10%.
10. Mock Mains Questions — White Revolution
Mains MockGS III15 Marks
⏱ Suggested time: 15 minutes | 250 words
Q1. "The White Revolution not only transformed India's dairy sector but also emerged as a model for rural poverty alleviation and women's empowerment." Critically examine this statement with current data.
Introduction: India's White Revolution (1970) under Verghese Kurien's Operation Flood created the world's most successful cooperative dairy sector — producing 239 MT milk (2023–24) and employing 8.5 crore people. But its transformative impact on poverty and gender equity deserves critical examination.
Dairy Sector Transformation — Achievements:
• Milk: 17 MT → 239 MT (14x growth); India = 24% of world output
• 1,35,439 village dairy cooperatives; 14 million farmer members
• Amul turnover: Group ₹80,000 crore (FY2024); exports to 50+ countries
• Per capita: 125g → 471g/day (2023–24) (exceeds WHO recommendation)
Rural Poverty Alleviation:
• Steady supplementary income for landless/marginal farmers
• Dairy provides income during crop failures — critical safety net
• Rural non-farm multiplier: milk processing, cold chain, transport
• India's rural poverty fell from 54% (1973) to 11.3% (NITI 2022–23) — dairy contribution acknowledged
Women's Empowerment — The Silent Revolution:
• Women = 70%+ of dairy workforce; primary milk collectors
• Cooperative membership gives legal income identity
• SHG-dairy links in Gujarat/Maharashtra → household decision-making power
• Kurien: "When you empower a dairy farmer, you empower a woman"
Critical Limitations:
• Regional disparities persist: Punjab 13.49 kg vs WB 6.30 kg/animal/day
• 63% milk in unorganised sector — women often underpaid
• North-East India has <5% dairy cooperative coverage
• Climate change and LSD outbreak (2022) threaten gains
• Growth rate slowed to 3.78% (2023–24)
Way Forward: White Revolution 2.0 — eastern India expansion, SHG-cooperative linkages, universal AI coverage, and WR 2.0 Margdarshika SOPs.
Conclusion: The White Revolution is a powerful model of cooperative-led rural transformation. But its uneven geographic and gender outcomes must be corrected by White Revolution 2.0 to fulfil its full potential.
Mains MockGS III10 Marks
⏱ Suggested time: 10 minutes | 150 words
Q2. What are the major challenges facing India's dairy sector in 2024–25? Examine how White Revolution 2.0 proposes to address them.
Introduction: Despite producing 239 MT milk (2023–24), India's dairy sector faces structural and ecological challenges that risk the gains of the original White Revolution.
Key Challenges:
• Slowing growth: Production growth fell from 6.47% (2018–19) to 3.83% (2022–23) and 3.78% (2023–24)
• Disease threats: LSD epidemic (2022) killed 1.5 lakh cattle; FMD remains endemic
• Unorganised dominance: 63% milk in informal sector — no quality control, no farmer price assurance
• Indigenous breed decline: Cross-breed focus → loss of climate-resilient native breeds
• Regional disparity: NE India, Eastern states barely covered by cooperatives
• Climate stress: Heat waves reduce milk yield; fodder shortage in arid zones
• Methane emissions: Livestock = 32% of India's CH4 emissions
White Revolution 2.0 Responses:
• Milk procurement target: 100 mn kg/day in 5 years
• PM Pashu Arogya Yojana: Universal vaccination for LSD, FMD, Brucellosis
• Lumpi-ProVac: ICAR's indigenous LSD vaccine (2023) — scaled for universal use
• Genetic improvement: AI coverage to 600 districts; sex-sorted semen
• e-Gopala App: 1 crore+ farmers on digital platform; Pashu Aadhaar
• Eastern India dairy push: National Dairy Plan II targets NE and Eastern states
Conclusion: White Revolution 2.0 correctly identifies the structural gaps. Its success depends on political will to formalise the unorganised sector and sustained veterinary infrastructure investment.
Mains MockGS III10 Marks
⏱ Suggested time: 10 minutes | 150 words
Q3. The Amul cooperative model is often described as the "gold standard" for agricultural marketing. What features make it successful, and can it be replicated in other sectors?
Three-tier structureEliminate middlemen₹80,000 crore group turnoverReplication in oilseedsFPO comparison
Introduction: The Amul cooperative, begun in 1946 in Anand, Gujarat, is today a group with ₹80,000 crore turnover (FY2024) serving 3.6 million farmers and exporting to 50+ countries — making it both an agricultural success story and a development model.
Features Making Amul Successful:
• Three-tier structure: Village cooperative → District union → State federation (GCMMF) — each tier has a distinct, non-overlapping role
• Middlemen elimination: Farmers receive 75–80% of consumer price — direct price justice
• Democratic governance: Elected farmer-representatives control cooperatives; professional management hired separately
• Value addition: Processing → butter, ghee, cheese, ice cream — higher margins distributed back to farmers
• Technology adoption: Computerised milk testing (fat/SNF content) ensures farmer payment accuracy
• Marketing excellence: Amul Girl campaign; brand equity built over 75 years
• Scale: 3.6 million farmers; 18,000+ cooperative employees; world's largest dairy cooperative
Can It Be Replicated?
• Already replicated: NDDB's Operation Flood spread the Amul model to 18 state dairy federations
• FPO parallel: Farmer Producer Organisations (10,000 FPO Scheme 2020–27) attempt similar structure for crops
• Challenges in replication: Non-perishable crops lack daily procurement necessity (which drives discipline in dairy); political interference in cooperatives; management quality varies
• Sectors where it can work: Horticulture (Sahyadri Farms model), fish (Blue Revolution cooperatives), oilseeds (NAFED model)
Conclusion: Amul succeeded because of professional management + democratic ownership + daily revenue flow + progressive technology. FPOs in non-dairy sectors can replicate the structure, but need sustained mentorship and market linkage support.
11. Practice MCQs — White Revolution (5 Questions)
Click on your answer. Correct answers highlight in green; wrong in red. Explanation appears immediately:
Q 1
Operation Flood, the programme that led to the White Revolution in India, was launched in which year and by which organisation?
Operation Flood was launched in 1970 by the NDDB under Prof. Verghese Kurien. NDDB itself was established in 1965 — do not confuse the two dates. It was the world's largest dairy development programme, creating a national milk grid. FCI handles foodgrains (not dairy). The Indian Dairy Corporation was later merged with NDDB in 1987.
Q 2
The Amul cooperative follows a "three-tier" cooperative structure. Which of the following correctly represents this structure from grassroots to apex level?
Amul's three-tier structure: (1) Village Dairy Cooperative Society (primary level — milk collection) → (2) District Milk Producers Union (processing and marketing in the district) → (3) State Federation — GCMMF (Gujarat Cooperative Milk Marketing Federation — branding and national/export marketing). This structure is now replicated in 18 state dairy federations across India under Operation Flood.
Q 3
Consider the following statements about India's dairy sector (2023–24): 1. India is the world's largest producer of milk, contributing ~24.76% of global output. 2. Per capita milk availability in India (471g/day) now exceeds the WHO-recommended level of 280g/day. 3. Over 80% of India's marketed milk is handled by the organised cooperative sector. Which of the above statements is/are correct?
Statements 1 and 2 are correct. Statement 3 is WRONG: approximately 63% of marketed milk is still in the unorganised sector (local vendors, informal traders) — only about 37% goes through organised cooperative or private channels. India is #1 globally in milk production (239.30 MT, 2023–24) contributing 24.76% of world output. Per capita milk availability reached 471 g/day (2023–24) — up from 459 g/day in 2022–23 — far exceeding the WHO-recommended 280g/day.
Q 4
Lumpy Skin Disease (LSD), which severely impacted India's cattle population in 2022, is caused by which type of pathogen? And what was ICAR's response?
Lumpy Skin Disease (LSD) is caused by the Capripoxvirus — a viral disease spread by insects (mosquitoes, flies, ticks). The 2022 outbreak affected 2 crore+ cattle, killing 1.5 lakh, primarily in Rajasthan, Gujarat, and Punjab. ICAR developed Lumpi-ProVac — India's first indigenous LSD vaccine — in 2023 at ICAR-NIVEDI (Bengaluru). This is a current affairs-heavy topic for UPSC 2025–26 under animal husbandry and biosecurity.
Q 5
White Revolution 2.0, introduced by the Ministry of Cooperation, targets milk procurement of how much within 5 years of initiating?
White Revolution 2.0, introduced by the Ministry of Cooperation through Standard Operating Procedures (Margdarshika), targets milk procurement of 100 million kg/day within 5 years of initiating. It focuses on: (1) cooperative coverage expansion to all 6.5 lakh villages; (2) 60% women participation in dairy cooperatives; (3) dairy export increase to $4 billion; (4) genetic improvement through AI and embryo transfer. The Ministry of Cooperation (established 2021) is a key current affairs institution for UPSC.