National Dairy Development Board (NDDB): Objectives, Functions, Subsidiaries & Initiatives

National Dairy Development Board (NDDB): Objectives, Functions, Subsidiaries & Initiatives | Legacy IAS
GS-III  ·  Agriculture & Rural Development

National Dairy Development Board (NDDB): Objectives, Functions, Subsidiaries & Major Initiatives

How NDDB transformed India into the world’s largest milk producer through dairy cooperatives, Operation Flood, and rural development programmes.

India is the world’s largest producer of milk, and the dairy sector plays a vital role in rural livelihoods, nutritional security, women empowerment, and agricultural diversification. At the heart of this transformation stands the National Dairy Development Board (NDDB) — established to replicate the success of the Anand cooperative model across India and drive the White Revolution.

“The Anand model showed that when farmers own and control their cooperatives, they get fair prices, and the nation gets milk.” — The philosophy behind NDDB’s founding.
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About NDDB — Quick Facts

📋 At a Glance
Full Name National Dairy Development Board
Established 1965
Founded by Verghese Kurien (“Milkman of India”)
Headquarters Anand, Gujarat
Legal Status Statutory body under NDDB Act, 1987
Ministry Fisheries, Animal Husbandry & Dairying
Status Institution of National Importance
Key Programme Operation Flood (White Revolution)

Objectives of NDDB

The major objectives of the National Dairy Development Board are:

  • To organise dairy farmers into cooperative societies based on the Anand Pattern.
  • To increase milk production and productivity across India.
  • To ensure remunerative prices to dairy farmers and eliminate intermediaries.
  • To provide quality milk to consumers at reasonable prices.
  • To promote rural employment and women’s participation in the dairy sector.
  • To strengthen the dairy value chain — including procurement, processing, and marketing.

Functions of NDDB

NDDB performs several core functions for the development of the dairy sector and dairy cooperatives in India:

Cooperative Development

Strengthens dairy cooperatives by organising milk producers into farmer-owned institutions based on the “Anand Pattern,” ensuring collective ownership, fair price realization, and elimination of intermediaries.

Scheme Implementation

Implements key national programmes such as the Rashtriya Gokul Mission and the National Programme for Dairy Development (NPDD) to enhance milk production, breed improvement, and dairy infrastructure.

Technical & Financial Support

Provides financial assistance, technical expertise, and managerial guidance to state milk federations and dairy unions to improve efficiency in milk procurement, processing, and marketing systems.

Animal Breeding & Genetic Improvement

Promotes scientific livestock development through artificial insemination, semen production systems, and breed improvement of indigenous cattle, along with livestock identification via Pashu Aadhaar.

Digitalisation of the Dairy Sector

Introduces technology-driven systems such as the Automatic Milk Collection System (AMCS), Internet-based Dairy Information System (i-DIS), and GIS-based logistics optimisation to improve transparency and efficiency.

Trade Regulation & Facilitation

Acts as a channelising agency for import and export of milk and milk products to protect domestic dairy farmers from global price fluctuations and unfair competition.

Data Collection & Policy Support

Maintains national dairy databases on milk production, livestock population, and procurement systems to support evidence-based policymaking and sector planning.

Institutional Revival & Allied Activities

Provides support to weak or loss-making milk unions and federations to restore financial viability, and encourages diversification into organic farming, beekeeping, and cooperative-based rural enterprises.

NDDB Subsidiaries

NDDB operates through six specialised subsidiaries to cover the entire dairy value chain:

Subsidiary Location Key Role
Mother Dairy Fruit & Vegetable Pvt. Ltd. Delhi Processing and marketing of dairy products, fruits, and vegetables
Indian Immunologicals Ltd. (IIL) Hyderabad Veterinary vaccines (FMD, rabies) and animal health products
IDMC Ltd. Anand Dairy machinery, automation systems, and turnkey dairy projects
NDDB Dairy Services (NDS) Pan-India Not-for-profit; establishes Producer Companies and manages semen stations
NDDB Mrida Ltd. Pan-India Manure management, biogas, and sustainable dairy farming
NDDB CALF Ltd. Pan-India Centre for Analysis and Learning in Livestock and Food

Major Initiatives of NDDB

🥛 Operation Flood — White Revolution (1970)

NDDB launched Operation Flood in 1970 to transform India from a milk-deficient country into a self-sufficient milk-producing nation. It organised dairy farmers into cooperatives, established the nationwide National Milk Grid, and connected milk-surplus regions with milk-deficit urban centres. It is the world’s largest dairy development programme.

🏗️ National Programme for Dairy Development (NPDD) — 2014

Launched in 2014 to strengthen dairy infrastructure and cooperative systems. NDDB provides technical expertise and support for milk chilling centres, processing plants, quality testing labs, cold-chain systems, and milk procurement network modernisation.

🐄 Rashtriya Gokul Mission — 2014

Launched to conserve indigenous cattle breeds (Gir, Sahiwal) and improve milk productivity. NDDB supports scientific breeding, artificial insemination services, and introduced IVF and Embryo Transfer (ET) technologies to rapidly propagate elite indigenous breeds.

💻 National Digital Livestock Mission (NDLM) — 2020

NDDB developed the “Bharat Pashudhan” database — a unified digital livestock management system with unique 12-digit identification numbers for individual animals enabling traceability, health monitoring, and vaccination tracking.

💉 Nationwide Artificial Insemination Programme (NAIP) — 2019

Launched to expand artificial insemination coverage across rural India. NDDB supports doorstep AI services using high-genetic merit and sex-sorted semen to improve cattle breeds and increase milk productivity at the village level.

👩‍🌾 MAITRIs Programme — 2020

Establishes Multi-Purpose Artificial Insemination Technicians in Rural India (MAITRIs) — trained village-level workers who provide AI services, breeding support, and animal healthcare in remote villages, extending last-mile reach.

♻️ NDDB Mrida — Manure Management & Biogas

NDDB Mrida Ltd. (established 2016) promotes scientific manure management, biogas production, bio-slurry utilisation, and sustainable dairy farming under the Gobardhan initiative — converting cattle waste into energy and organic inputs.

📱 Digital Dairy & AMCS

NDDB introduced Automatic Milk Collection Systems (AMCS) and Internet-based Dairy Information Systems (i-DIS) to modernise milk procurement, enable digital payments to farmers, and improve milk quality testing and supply-chain transparency in cooperatives.

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Contributions to India’s Dairy Economy

  • World’s Largest Milk Producer: India transformed from a milk-deficient country in the 1960s to the world’s largest milk producer — a feat largely attributed to NDDB’s cooperative model.
  • Rural Livelihood: Dairy cooperatives ensure daily cash flow for millions of small and marginal farmers, reducing dependence on seasonal crop agriculture.
  • Women Empowerment: Dairying is one of the largest sources of women’s economic participation in rural India; women-led cooperatives have strengthened financial inclusion and social agency.
  • Nutritional Security: Increased milk availability and affordability have improved nutritional intake, especially among children and vulnerable populations.
  • Agricultural Diversification: Dairying provides an alternative income source during crop failures and climate shocks, reducing agricultural risk.
  • Cooperative Movement: NDDB strengthened India’s cooperative movement by creating democratic, farmer-owned institutions that improved rural bargaining power.
  • Dairy Infrastructure: NDDB built modern dairy plants, chilling centres, cold chains, feed plants, and milk testing laboratories that modernised the value chain.
  • Value Addition & Exports: The sector increasingly produces cheese, butter, paneer, yoghurt, ice cream, and milk powder — enhancing profitability and export potential.
⭐ UPSC Exam Takeaways
  • Syllabus: GS Paper III — Agriculture, Food Security, Rural Development, Government Schemes.
  • Prelims fact: NDDB established in 1965 by Verghese Kurien; statutory body under NDDB Act, 1987; HQ at Anand, Gujarat.
  • Operation Flood: Launched 1970 — world’s largest dairy development programme — drove the White Revolution.
  • Anand Pattern: Three-tier cooperative model (village society → district union → state federation) — the template for India’s dairy success.
  • Link to schemes: Rashtriya Gokul Mission (2014), NPDD (2014), NAIP (2019), NDLM (2020), MAITRIs (2020) — all NDDB-supported.
  • Socio-economic angle: Women empowerment, rural livelihoods, agricultural diversification — use NDDB as a case study in answers on cooperatives and rural development.
  • Current relevance: Bharat Pashudhan digital platform, Gobardhan biogas — link to digital agriculture and circular economy themes.
✏️ Mains Mock Question — GS Paper III
15 Marks  |  250 Words

“The success of India’s dairy cooperative movement holds lessons for broader agricultural transformation and rural development.” Critically examine the role of the National Dairy Development Board (NDDB) in this transformation, highlighting challenges that remain.

Answer Pointers
  • Introduction: India — world’s largest milk producer; NDDB’s role in driving the White Revolution through the Anand cooperative model.
  • Cooperative model: Three-tier Anand Pattern; elimination of intermediaries; fair price realization; collective ownership by farmers.
  • Key initiatives: Operation Flood, Rashtriya Gokul Mission, NAIP, NDLM / Bharat Pashudhan, MAITRIs, AMCS.
  • Socio-economic impact: Women empowerment (women-led cooperatives), rural livelihoods, nutritional security, agricultural diversification.
  • Lessons for agriculture: Farmer-owned institutions, value chain integration, technology adoption, extension services — applicable to crop cooperatives, FPOs.
  • Challenges: Fragmented landholding, climate change impact on fodder, competition from private dairy players, under-coverage in eastern and northeastern India, need for further digitisation.
  • Conclusion: NDDB’s cooperative model is a replicable blueprint — but requires institutional capacity building, digital infrastructure, and inclusive outreach to sustain the next phase of dairy growth.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the National Dairy Development Board (NDDB)? +

NDDB is a statutory organisation established by the Government of India in 1965 under the leadership of Verghese Kurien. Headquartered in Anand, Gujarat, it was created to promote, finance, and support producer-owned dairy cooperative institutions across India.

It was declared an Institution of National Importance under the NDDB Act, 1987, and functions under the Ministry of Fisheries, Animal Husbandry and Dairying.

What is Operation Flood and what was NDDB’s role? +

Operation Flood (also called the White Revolution) was launched by NDDB in 1970 — the world’s largest dairy development programme. Its aim was to transform India from a milk-deficient country into a self-sufficient milk-producing nation.

NDDB organised dairy farmers into cooperatives, established the National Milk Grid connecting milk-surplus regions with milk-deficit urban centres, strengthened procurement and marketing systems, and provided technical and managerial support to dairy unions.

What is the Anand Pattern of dairy cooperatives? +

The Anand Pattern is a three-tier cooperative structure pioneered in Anand, Gujarat, that became the model for India’s dairy cooperatives:

  • Tier 1: Village-level milk cooperative societies
  • Tier 2: District-level milk unions
  • Tier 3: State-level milk federations

This model ensures collective ownership, fair price realization, and elimination of intermediaries. It was replicated nationally through NDDB’s Operation Flood.

What are the main subsidiaries of NDDB? +

NDDB operates through six main subsidiaries covering the entire dairy value chain:

  • Mother Dairy (Delhi) — dairy products, fruits, and vegetables
  • Indian Immunologicals Ltd. (IIL) (Hyderabad) — veterinary vaccines and animal health
  • IDMC Ltd. (Anand) — dairy machinery and automation systems
  • NDDB Dairy Services (NDS) — Producer Companies and semen stations
  • NDDB Mrida Ltd. — manure management and biogas
  • NDDB CALF Ltd. — analysis and learning in livestock and food
What is the Rashtriya Gokul Mission and NDDB’s role in it? +

The Rashtriya Gokul Mission was launched in 2014 to conserve indigenous cattle breeds and improve milk productivity. NDDB supports the mission through:

  • Scientific breeding programmes and artificial insemination services
  • IVF and Embryo Transfer (ET) technologies to propagate elite breeds like Gir and Sahiwal
  • Development of indigenous IVF media to reduce breeding costs
  • Livestock management systems and Pashu Aadhaar identification
How has NDDB contributed to women empowerment in rural India? +

Dairying has become one of the largest sources of women’s economic participation in rural India, largely due to NDDB’s cooperative model. Key contributions include:

  • Women hold direct membership and voting rights in dairy cooperative societies.
  • Daily milk income reduces dependence on seasonal agriculture.
  • Women-led dairy cooperatives have strengthened financial inclusion and social agency.
  • Dairying is primarily managed by women in most rural households, giving them control over income.
What is the National Digital Livestock Mission (NDLM)? +

The National Digital Livestock Mission (NDLM) was launched in 2020, under which NDDB developed the “Bharat Pashudhan” database — a unified digital livestock management system.

NDDB introduced unique 12-digit identification numbers for individual livestock, enabling traceability, breeding records, health monitoring, and vaccination tracking across India — a major step towards data-driven animal husbandry.

What is the MAITRIs programme? +

MAITRIs stands for Multi-Purpose Artificial Insemination Technicians in Rural India. Launched in 2020, this programme trains and deploys village-level technicians to provide:

  • Doorstep artificial insemination services using high-genetic merit semen
  • Breeding support and animal healthcare in remote villages
  • Last-mile extension of NDDB’s breed improvement programmes

MAITRIs are critical for reaching small and marginal farmers who cannot access veterinary services easily.

NDDB UPSC GS-III Agriculture Operation Flood White Revolution Dairy Cooperatives Verghese Kurien Rashtriya Gokul Mission Rural Development Current Affairs 2026

Prepared by the editorial team at Legacy IAS, Bangalore’s trusted UPSC civil services coaching institute.
For classroom notes, test series, and mentorship, visit legacyias.com

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