Fodder shortage hurdle for livestock farming: Survey


UPSC Study Note: Fodder Shortage — Hurdle for Livestock Farming (Economic Survey 2025-26)


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
1970s Operation Flood (White Revolution) — dairy expansion exposes fodder supply gaps for the first time at scale
1980s National Commission on Agriculture identifies green fodder deficit; waste-land fodder cultivation mooted
2014–15 National Livestock Mission (NLM) restructured; fodder and feed development made a sub-mission
2021 Animal Husbandry Infrastructure Development Fund (AHIDF) — ₹15,000 crore fund to incentivise private investment in feed/fodder processing and livestock infrastructure [S3]
2021–22 Rashtriya Gokul Mission extended; includes conservation of indigenous breeds, indirectly linked to fodder efficiency
2024–25 Livestock GVA nears 195% growth over a decade; fodder area expansion fails to keep pace [S1]
Jan 2026 Economic Survey 2025-26 formally identifies fodder deficit as the most critical constraint for the sector [S1]

4. Core Static Facts

Definitions & Terminologies - Fodder / Feed: Green or dry plant material (grass, crop residues, silage) consumed by livestock. Distinct from concentrate feed (grain-based, protein-rich supplements). - CAGR: Compound Annual Growth Rate — measures mean annual growth over a multi-year period. - GVA (Gross Value Added): Output value minus input costs; used to measure sector's economic contribution.

Implementing Ministry / Bodies - Ministry of Fisheries, Animal Husbandry and Dairying (MoFAHD) — nodal ministry [S3] - Department of Animal Husbandry and Dairying (DAHD) — implementing department - ICAR-IGFRI (Indian Grassland and Fodder Research Institute, Jhansi) — premier R&D body for fodder crops

Key Numbers — Livestock Sector - CAGR at current prices (FY15–FY24): 12.77% [S1][S2] - CAGR at constant prices (FY15–FY23): 7.38% [S2] - GVA increase over decade: ~195% [S1] - Livestock sector contributes approximately 4.5% of total GVA and ~25% of agricultural GVA (Economic Survey 2024-25 estimates)

Key Numbers — Fisheries Sector - Total fish production: 95.79 lakh tonnes (2013-14)197.75 lakh tonnes (2024-25) [S4] - Average annual growth rate in fisheries: 8.74% [S4] - Seafood exports: ₹46,662.85 crore (FY20) → ₹60,523.89 crore (FY24) (growth: ~29.7%) [S4]

Key Constraints Identified by Economic Survey 2025-26 1. Feed and fodder shortage (most critical) 2. Dependence on a narrow export basket 3. Infrastructure gaps

Key Schemes | Scheme | Ministry | Key Feature | |--------|----------|-------------| | National Livestock Mission (NLM) | MoFAHD/DAHD | Fodder & feed sub-mission; pasture development [S3] | | Animal Husbandry Infrastructure Development Fund (AHIDF) | MoFAHD/DAHD | ₹15,000 cr; incentivises private sector in feed/processing [S3] | | Rashtriya Gokul Mission | DAHD | Indigenous breed conservation | | PM Matsya Sampada Yojana (PMMSY) | MoFAHD | Fisheries infrastructure; ₹20,050 crore outlay |

Enabling Acts / Policy - National Policy for Farmers, 2007 — includes livestock and fodder provisions - Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act, 1960 — animal welfare dimension - No dedicated standalone "Fodder Act" exists at Centre; state-level pasture land laws vary


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Social

Environmental

Scientific / Technological

Administrative

Ethical / Governance


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. The Economic Survey 2025-26 identified feed and fodder shortage as the most critical constraint for India's livestock sector.
  2. India's livestock sector registered a CAGR of 12.77% at current prices between FY2014-15 and FY2023-24.
  3. At constant prices, livestock sector CAGR was 7.38% (FY15–FY23).
  4. Livestock sector GVA increased by ~195% over the decade ending FY2024.
  5. India's total fish production grew from 95.79 lakh tonnes (2013-14) to 197.75 lakh tonnes (2024-25).
  6. India's average annual fisheries growth rate over the decade: 8.74%.
  7. Seafood exports grew from ₹46,662.85 crore (FY20) to ₹60,523.89 crore (FY24) — an increase of ~29.7%.
  8. The nodal ministry for Animal Husbandry and Dairying is the Ministry of Fisheries, Animal Husbandry and Dairying (MoFAHD).
  9. AHIDF (Animal Husbandry Infrastructure Development Fund) has a corpus of ₹15,000 crore to incentivise private sector investment in feed/fodder processing.
  10. Premier R&D institute for fodder research: ICAR-IGFRI (Indian Grassland and Fodder Research Institute), located at Jhansi, Uttar Pradesh.
  11. Animal Husbandry is a State List subject (List II, Seventh Schedule) but related Central schemes run as Centrally Sponsored Schemes.
  12. The Economic Survey 2025-26 also flagged dependence on a narrow export basket and infrastructure gaps as challenges for livestock + fisheries sectors.
  13. NLM (National Livestock Mission) includes a dedicated Fodder and Feed Development sub-mission.
  14. PM Matsya Sampada Yojana (PMMSY) — India's flagship fisheries scheme — has an outlay of ₹20,050 crore.

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Mapping

GS Paper Specific Syllabus Heading
GS-III Animal Husbandry; Food Processing & Related Industries; Government Policies & Interventions for Agriculture
GS-I Distribution of key natural resources across India (pasture/grazing land)
GS-II Government schemes and policies; federalism in agricultural policy

Plausible Mains Question Stems

  1. "Despite a CAGR of over 12% in the last decade, India's livestock sector faces structural constraints that threaten its long-term sustainability. Critically examine the challenges of fodder shortage and suggest a multi-pronged policy roadmap." (GS-III, 15 marks)

  2. "The governance of common pasture and grazing lands in India is marked by federal fragmentation and encroachment. Analyse the implications for livestock-dependent livelihoods and propose institutional reforms." (GS-II/III, 15 marks)

  3. "India's fisheries sector has doubled production in a decade but remains constrained by a narrow export basket. Evaluate the structural and policy factors responsible and suggest measures to diversify." (GS-III, 10 marks)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
National Livestock Mission (NLM) Central scheme directly addressing fodder, breed improvement, and livestock insurance
PM Matsya Sampada Yojana Fisheries counterpart to NLM; same Economic Survey chapter; same ministry
White Revolution / Operation Flood Historical precedent showing how scaling dairy without fodder planning creates supply crises
Common Property Resources (CPR) Degradation Encroachment on grazing lands is a root cause of fodder deficit; linked to land rights and rural governance
Climate Change & Agriculture (GS-III) Drought-induced fodder crises are climate-linked; must understand adaptation strategies
Food Inflation & Value Chain Fodder shortage → higher milk/meat production costs → food inflation — GS-III economic linkage
Animal Husbandry Infrastructure Development Fund (AHIDF) Specific scheme frequently asked; linked to private sector in agri-value chains
Land Use & Wasteland Atlas of India Understanding degraded/pasture land availability is key to fodder expansion strategy

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong Ministry: Aspirants confuse Ministry of Agriculture & Farmers' Welfare with Ministry of Fisheries, Animal Husbandry and Dairying (MoFAHD). Animal husbandry is under MoFAHD, not MoAFW.

  2. CAGR Confusion: Two different CAGR figures exist — 12.77% at current prices vs 7.38% at constant prices (FY15–FY23). Mixing them up in a Mains answer is a common error.

  3. Conflating NLM with AHIDF: NLM is a Centrally Sponsored Scheme for overall livestock development; AHIDF is a specific credit/infrastructure fund for private sector investment. They are distinct instruments under the same ministry.

  4. State vs Concurrent List: Animal Husbandry falls under State List (Entry 15, List II), not Concurrent List. However, the Central government runs schemes via Article 282 and CSS framework — aspirants often cite "Concurrent List" incorrectly.

  5. Fodder vs Feed: These are not synonymous. Fodder = roughage (grass, silage, hay, crop residues). Feed = concentrate (grains, oil-cakes, mineral supplements). The Economic Survey distinguishes both as separate supply constraints.


11. Sources