GUWAHATI
A biosecure nuclear breeding farm and mannequin fattener farms are fuelling the drive of a tribal council in Assam to turn into the hub of high quality pig manufacturing for the pork-loving northeast India and past.
In 2021, the authorities of the Bodoland Territorial Region (BTR) turned to Europe for a challenge to raise the standard system of pig farming with scientific inputs. The end result was the Bodoland Pig Mission, a collaboration of the BTR authorities with the Netherlands-based Programma Uitzending Managers (PUM) and Denmark’s Danish Consortium of Academic Craftsmanship (DCAC).
After initiating the method to improve present infrastructure and coaching 115 farmers on pig breeding and scientific farm administration, the challenge is taking form with a British breed of home pigs — the Large White Yorkshire — being introduced from the Netherlands.
Pushpadhar Das, an Officer on Special Duty related to the mission, mentioned 260 Large White Yorkshires — 250 sows and 10 boars — are destined for a nucleus pig breeding farm arising on the Dakhin Maithabari village in Baksa, one in all 5 districts of the 8,970 sq. km BTR. The PUM is offering technical help to this farm, the primary of its sort in the northeast.
“We are bringing the British breed because we don’t get a pure breed here. We expect the pigs from the Netherlands in January 2026 after the construction of the Baksa nucleus breeding farm is over in the next three months,” he mentioned.
This nucleus farm is predicted to provide high-genetic benefit gilts and sows for breeder and multiplier farms established or deliberate throughout the BTR. A gilt is a younger feminine pig that has not but given beginning to her first litter of piglets.
Piglets born in the nucleus farm and in these of the specialised breeders will probably be distributed among the many pig farmers.
Demand-supply hole
Pork is essentially the most consumed meat amongst a lot of the 26 tribal and non-tribal communities in the BTR. Pigs are reared by many villagers throughout the BTR panorama, however demand is approach above the native provide, forcing the area to acquire pigs from different elements of the nation at the next price and with dangers of illness transmission.
Officials mentioned the BTR consumes more than 25,000 metric tonnes of pork yearly, native manufacturing accounting for lower than 40% of the demand. The Bodoland Pig Mission was launched to bridge the demand-supply hole and develop an entire worth chain across the pork business.
The key parts of the mission are checking inbreeding by sustaining a database of pigs, which is able to endure synthetic insemination, and their offspring.
“According to an agreement we signed with the DCAC in 2023, our farmers will be sent to Denmark for training and experts from the European country will visit us. These experts are expected to guide the farmers in designing slaughterhouses, cold chain maintenance, and breeding, among other activities related to the pork industry,” Mr. Das mentioned.
He added that the Bodoland Pig Mission has set a seven-year goal to attain the aim of manufacturing 1 lakh kg of high-quality, hygienic pork each day.
Focus on biosecurity
When African swine fever hit most farmers throughout the northeast, pig farmers in the BTR didn’t undergo a lot. The main causes have been the provision of biosecurity kits to present pig farms below the ‘Save the Pigs’ initiative and doorstep veterinary providers being supplied by the Pashusakhi community, with more than 5,000 farmers skilled in scientific pig rearing.
The mission can be selling mannequin fattener farms, six of that are being developed throughout the BTR. The focus of such farms is on “maximising growth and meat quality through optimised nutrition and feeding strategies” with the first aim of reaching a market-ready weight for slaughter.
Some 30,000 farmers are being lined for fattener farms, Mr Das mentioned.
Another key part of the mission is the promotion of larger community-based farms, every geared up to provide a sizeable variety of fattener pigs.







