CM Manik Saha Signs NDDB MoU to Boost Tripura Dairy Sector
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Tripura Chief Minister Dr. Manik Saha on Tuesday, 23 June 2026, presided over the signing of a tripartite Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) at the state secretariat in Agartala between the Livestock Development Department, the National Dairy Development Board (NDDB), and the Gomati Co-operative Milk Producer Union — a move the Chief Minister described as 'historic' for Tripura's dairy cooperative sector.
Context
Posting in Bengali on X, Dr. Saha said the agreement was signed in the presence of NDDB Chairman Dr. Meenesh Shah, Minister Shri Sudhanshu Das, and Minister Sukla Charan Noatia, along with other senior officials. The Chief Minister expressed 'firm belief' that this 'historic agreement' (ঐতিহাসিক চুক্তি) will 'strengthen and energise Tripura's dairy cooperative system.' He added that through this initiative, milk production in the state will increase, the path to self-reliance in the dairy sector will be eased, and 'a new horizon will open for the socio-economic development of our hardworking dairy farmers.'
Policy Backdrop
The National Dairy Development Board is a statutory body under the Union Ministry of Fisheries, Animal Husbandry and Dairying, established in 1965 to replicate the Anand-pattern dairy cooperative model — the backbone of India's 'Operation Flood' — across the country. Over the decades, NDDB has extended technical and institutional support to northeastern states to organise smallholder dairy producers into cooperatives, improve market linkages, and raise local milk output.
The Gomati Co-operative Milk Producer Union is a district-level cooperative in Tripura responsible for the collection, processing, and marketing of milk from local farmers. The tripartite MoU brings together state government machinery, the national apex dairy body, and a grassroots producer union — a structure designed to align policy, technical expertise, and farmer participation under one framework.
Stakeholders and Impact
The primary beneficiaries of the agreement are Tripura's dairy farmers and milk producer cooperatives, particularly smallholder producers in rural and semi-urban areas. Dr. Saha stated that the state government 'is always committed to the welfare of farmers and dairy farmers,' and that this initiative 'will play an important role in further enriching Tripura's rural economy.'
Tripura's move fits a wider national pattern of state governments partnering with NDDB to modernise dairy value chains and enhance rural incomes under the broader livestock sector development framework. For a state where agriculture and allied activities form a significant share of the rural livelihood base, improved milk procurement and cooperative infrastructure can have a measurable multiplier effect on household incomes.
What's Next
Attention will now turn to the rollout of specific interventions under the MoU — including new milk collection infrastructure, chilling plants, and farmer training programmes — that will determine the agreement's on-ground impact. Official milk production and procurement data released by the Tripura government in subsequent quarters will serve as the key metric for evaluating progress toward the self-reliance goal articulated by Chief Minister Dr. Saha.
If implemented effectively, the partnership could position Tripura as a model for NDDB-backed cooperative dairy development in the northeast, with implications for how other states in the region approach the sector.