Resilient Buffalo Economy

Buffalo focused Tree – Crop – Livestock Integration

Integrates buffalo husbandry, fodder security, trees, and nutrient recycling into one circular model designed to increase farm income, stabilize milk quality, and reduce carbon footprint

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Farm Architecture

research-backed model refined over years of practical application

Three Pillars of the Buffalo Economy

The three structural drivers that make the Buffalo Economy resilient, profitable, and low-carbon.

Resilient Buffalo Husbandry

Buffaloes are naturally suited to India’s fodder and feed systems. With structured breeding and disciplined management, they produce consistent high-fat, high-solids milk that improves product value and farm margins.

Stable milk quality and stronger profitability.
Tree–Crop–Livestock Integration

Trees, fodder, crops, and livestock operate as one coordinated system. Trees function as carbon sinks, fodder cycles reduce repeated tillage, paddy straw is fully utilized, and manure returns nutrients to the soil.

A circular farm model with lower input dependency.
Low-Carbon Dairy Production

Carbon footprint refers to greenhouse gas emissions linked to production and transport over time. By integrating trees, optimizing fodder cycles, and reducing external inputs, the system lowers emissions per unit of milk.

Reduced carbon intensity without compromising profitability.

Value Delivered

Tangible benefits for farmers, the milk supply chain, and the environment

For Farmers
  • Higher income from high-solids milk
  • Reduced dependency on external feed markets
  • Lower heifer raising costs
  • Stable, internally supported fodder supply
For the Milk Supply Chain
  • Reliable volume from partner farms
  • Consistent fat and solids content
  • Improved predictability in milk quality
  • Strong foundation for value-added dairy products
For the Environment
  • Carbon sequestration through tree integration
  • Reduced soil disturbance through optimized fodder cycles
  • Nutrient recycling via manure management
  • Lower emissions intensity per unit of milk

Knowledge center

Insights, article and news covering vast topics .

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