New Liquid Milk Pouch from India Converts to Bioavailable Wax

Following four years of development, India dairy company Mother Dairy introduces a pouch for liquid milk that microbes in soil can fully consume, leaving no plastic residue.

At the launch event, Mother Dairy showcased its new Cow Milk pouch in both individual and multipack formats. The pouch's pink-and-white design is part of a broader refresh of the company’s milk portfolio.
At the launch event, Mother Dairy showcased its new Cow Milk pouch in both individual and multipack formats. The pouch's pink-and-white design is part of a broader refresh of the company’s milk portfolio.
Mother Dairy

Mother Dairy, one of India’s largest dairy companies and a wholly owned subsidiary of the National Dairy Development Board (NDDB), has introduced what it describes as India’s first naturally degradable milk pouch in soil, rolling it out on June 5, World Environment Day, through its Cow Milk fresh liquid milk variant in Delhi National Capital Region (NCR). The new pouch also carries a refreshed pack design, marking a decade of the Cow Milk brand.

The packaging is built around a proprietary degradation technology that the company says took more than four years to develop. When the pouch ends up in soil, it converts into a bioavailable wax that microbes then consume and break down into natural elements. According to Mother Dairy, the pouch leaves behind no plastics or harmful residues. That claim has been tested independently: the packaging has been evaluated for biodegradability, eco-toxicity, and heavy metal content in an NABL-accredited lab under ISO 17556, OECD 208, ISO 11268-1, ISO 11268-2, and IS 3025 (Part 65) standards.

For consumers, the transition requires no behavior change. The pouch stores, handles, and disposes the same way as existing packaging, with no effect on shelf life, taste, or quality. The company says it is also designed to remain stable under the storage and transportation conditions typical across India, including warm weather.

The pouch also continues to be recyclable; degradability is the distinguishing step forward. “While these milk pouches will continue to remain recyclable, the key differentiator lies in their ability to degrade into natural elements, thereby helping address the challenge of fugitive plastic and contributing towards a cleaner ecosystem,” says Jayatheertha Chary, managing director of Mother Dairy, “We are delighted to introduce this pioneering packaging innovation through our famed Cow Milk variant, which will also feature a refreshed pack design as it marks a decade of trust and goodness.”

The Cow Milk package is a pillow-style flexible pouch in white and pink, carrying the Mother Dairy brand mark in the company’s signature blue shield. The front panel calls out the product’s 4% fat (minimum) content alongside familiar consumer cues, and the updated pack now includes a “New Pack” callout alongside the sustainability claim prominently printed at the base.

The visual refresh introduces cleaner typography and brighter color tones. Central to the redesign is what Mother Dairy calls the “Note of Care,” a brand device drawn from its logo, featuring everyday messages, things like “drink your milk” or “get home safe,” meant to bring warmth to the shelf presence. The company plans to extend this design system across its broader milk portfolio over time.

Dr. Meenesh Shah, chairman of NDDB and Mother Dairy, framed the launch within the wider ambitions of India’s dairy sector. “The launch of India’s first naturally degradable milk pouch by Mother Dairy is yet another milestone reflecting the sector’s continued ability to lead and set new benchmarks, while remaining committed to a future-ready and sustainable ecosystem,” Shah says. “The newly introduced packaging is designed to naturally degrade in soil within a few years rather than centuries, and importantly, this transition is being undertaken without any impact on consumer milk prices.”

Mother Dairy says the Cow Milk launch is the first step in a broader sustainability initiative, with the Cow Milk variant serving as the starting point for what the company hopes will inform further packaging innovation across its dairy portfolio.  PW

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