Food and Agriculture
Farmer centric innovation in animal feed
01 Aug 2025
The
global animal feed industry, long characterised by scale but low
differentiation, is undergoing a quiet transformation. Across emerging markets
like India and advanced economies alike, innovation focused squarely on farmers
is redefining how feed is produced, distributed, and consumed, with profound
consequences for rural livelihoods, supply chains, and agri-business margins.
Expanding
market, led by emerging economies
Globally,
the animal feed sector is projected to grow from an estimated US$ 483B in
2025 to more than US$ 600B by the early 2030s (Exhibit 1), registering a
compound annual growth rate of 5%. Asia-Pacific dominates the market,
accounting for nearly one-third of global production, driven by strong demand
from China, India, Vietnam and Indonesia.
India,
in particular, is emerging as a key node. The country’s animal feed market comprising
cattle, poultry, aquaculture, and pig feed is valued at US$ 14B in 2025,
this will rise to US$ 20B by 2030 (Exhibit 1), growing at a CAGR of 7%.
This is fuelled by a confluence of factors: rising protein consumption, policy
support for animal husbandry, and a growing base of tech-savvy,
productivity-driven farmers.
Exhibit 1: India's global animal feed market share & export performance

India’s
animal feed exports declined sharply in 2024, falling nearly 20% year-on-year after several
years of robust growth. Export values had risen from US$ 1.5B in 2020 to a peak of US$ 3B in 2023, before dropping
to US$2.3 billion
in 2024. Despite the recent dip, the sector still recorded a healthy 12% CAGR over the 2020–2024
period. Bangladesh remained the
largest export destination, followed by Vietnam, South Korea,
Iran, and Nepal indicating sustained regional demand despite tightening supply.
The
export decline was primarily driven by a 21% fall
in oilmeal shipments in FY25, stemming from both policy constraints and weakening external
demand. A key regulatory factor was the government’s ban on de-oiled rice bran (DORB) exports,
implemented in July
2023 and extended through September 2025. DORB, which previously accounted
for 10–12% of total feed exports,
saw volumes fall to near zero.
Concurrently,
demand for soybean and
rapeseed meal weakened across key Asian markets, further
reducing outbound volumes.
Domestically,
surging consumption by the
poultry, dairy, and ethanol sectors has further tightened
exportable supply. The poultry
and dairy industries, which together consume over 80% of India’s compound feed,
are expanding steadily. Broiler
production has been growing at 7–8% annually, while milk output rose by 5.3% in 2022–23.
These segments are heavily dependent on protein-rich inputs like soybean meal,
rapeseed meal, and DORB.
Simultaneously,
the ethanol blending programme
which targets 20%
blending by 2025 has diverted an estimated 5–6 million tonnes of grains
(notably maize) from feed to fuel, creating further input shortages and upward
pressure on prices.
This
growing competition for feed raw
materials within the domestic market has reduced India’s
exportable surplus, even as global markets remain volatile. With rising
domestic costs and limited inventory, India’s
ability to offer competitively priced feed exports has weakened
particularly against low-cost producers like Argentina and Brazil. As a result, India has lost
market share in key oilmeal importing nations such as Vietnam and South Korea,
underscoring its declining competitiveness in a saturated global feed landscape.
Despite
recent headwinds, India remains well-positioned to expand its footprint in
global feed markets. As
global buyers diversify supply chains and seek cost-effective alternatives,
India’s scale, proximity to key Asian markets, and evolving trade architecture
may help it capture greater market share in the coming years.
Corporate
strategy turns farmer first
In
India, feed companies traditionally focused on scale and logistics are now
pivoting to a farmer-first model, investing in technology, advisory platforms
and custom formulations (Exhibit 2).
Exhibit 2: Corporate strategies
pivoting to farmer-first models
Globally newer players are challenging
conventional market working:
Charoen
Pokphand Foods (CPF), the Thai conglomerate, has expanded its feed-tech R&D
capabilities, with a focus on traceability and efficiency. CPF’s digital
solutions allow farmers to monitor animal weight gain and feed conversion in
real time, linking feed consumption directly to yield and margins.
In the UK, start-ups are building modular systems where Black Soldier Fly (BSF) larvae consume organic waste and are then proceeded into high-protein insect meal (upto 60%). This sustainable feed alternative to soy and fishmeal is gaining popularity in poultry and aquaculture. With lower land, water, and emissions intensity, and reduced logistics cost, BSF based systems align with circular economy goals and are drawing investor interest amid tightening sustainability norms.
From
productivity gains to profitability uplift
Feed
innovations are delivering measurable impacts at the farm level translating
directly into both productivity improvements and profitability gains.
In poultry, the adoption of phytogenic additives, amino acid fortification, and digital advisory tools has led to a 12% increase in average daily weight gain, along with marked improvements in feed conversion ratios (FCR). These efficiency gains are driving net income increases of INR 7-12 per bird, varying by farm size across small, medium, and large-scale operations.
In dairy, especially in heat-stressed regions (like Maharashtra), enhanced feed
blends have boosted milk yields by 8–15%, helping farmers maintain
performance under climatic stress.
Overall,
these feed innovations result in:
- Shorter
production cycles
- Lower
input costs per unit of meat or milk
- Greater
marketable output and improved profitability
New
feed economy in the makingThe
animal feed industry may never achieve the glamour of precision agriculture or
biotech. But it is, quietly, becoming a battleground for innovation with real
impact.
As
regulatory pressures around traceability and sustainability intensify, and as
global protein demand continues to climb, companies that prioritise farmer
outcomes through better yield, health, and profitability are likely to capture
the next phase of growth.
The new formula is clear: farmer gains are industry gains. And that's an equation investors, policymakers and agribusiness leaders would do well to pay closer attention to.
How can Praxis help? At Praxis, we partner with animal nutrition, poultry, and aquaculture companies to unlock sustainable revenue growth through digital transformation, and commercial excellence. Our focus is on building customized growth playbooks, optimizing go-to-market strategies, and enabling data- driven decision making (Exhibit 3). With deep expertise in the animal nutrition and agribusiness space, we bring in proven frameworks and benchmarks to enable faster market access, higher feed conversion efficiency, and stronger partner ecosystems.
Exhibit
3: Capabilities we build and implement