Fonterra Chooses MyMilk Founder Richard Allen to Lead the Dairy Co-op Into 2026

Fonterra Chooses MyMilk Founder Richard Allen to Lead the Dairy Co-op Into 2026

The world’s largest dairy exporter has closed its CEO search — and it never needed to look outside its own ranks. Fonterra’s appointment of Richard Allen ends a process that began when Miles Hurrell handed in his notice in December, and the choice of a near two-decade company veteran tells you precisely what the board … Read more

Fonterra vs Amul: One Dairy Cooperative Made Farmers Rich, the Other Didn’t — Here’s Why

Fonterra vs Amul: One Dairy Cooperative Made Farmers Rich, the Other Didn't — Here's Why

In the village of Kuha, roughly forty kilometres from Anand in Gujarat, a woman named Ramaben pours eight litres of buffalo milk into a steel canister every morning. She earns approximately ₹57 per litre — deposited directly into her bank account within days. Halfway across the planet, in the Waikato region of New Zealand, a Fonterra shareholder-farmer checks a global commodity index before breakfast, knowing that his annual payout depends not on local consumers but on the price Chinese importers are willing to pay for whole milk powder. Two cooperatives, both claiming to serve farmers first — but only one has consistently delivered on that promise.

I have spent years tracking the cooperative dairy sector across continents, and this comparison haunts me because it reveals something fundamental: structure determines destiny. The way a cooperative is designed — who controls it, where its revenue comes from, how decisions flow — matters more than scale, technology, or even geography. And the Amul-Fonterra divergence is the sharpest case study I know.

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New Zealand’s Fonterra vs India’s Amul — Who Actually Serves Farmers Better?

New Zealand's Fonterra vs India's Amul — Who Actually Serves Farmers Better?

A dairy farmer in Waikato, New Zealand, earns roughly NZD 8.50 per kilogram of milk solids from Fonterra in a good season. A dairy farmer in Sabarkantha, Gujarat, takes home approximately ₹55-65 per litre from her village cooperative linked to Amul. On paper, the Kiwi farmer looks wealthier. But strip away currency conversions, input costs, … Read more