Ramilaben
 Govindbhai Patel hasn't been to college. But at 43, she earns what some
 CEOs take home. Nothing fancy here. She milks cows every day and 
supplies milk to a dairy co-operative. She milked Rs 1.10 crore - Rs 
1,10,17,675 - net profit in 2011-12, to be precise!
At Pentarpura
 village in Sabarkantha district, Ramilaben's dairy farm churns out 5.55
 lakh litres of milk per annum. What had started as a backyard business 
in 2000 is now a full-fledged family business. She is an outstanding 
success story of the change the White Revolution has brought about in 
Amul capital.
Twelve years ago, Ramilaben registered herself as a primary milk 
producer at Pentarpura's dudh mandali (village level milk society) and 
took a bank loan for five cross-bred cows. Today, she runs 'Jai Ranchod 
Dudh Utpadan Kendra', which is a five-acre home to 280 cattle where 40 
workers get employment, even though the farm has four automatic milking 
machines.
She and her husband Govindbhai visited israel last year to finalise plans to set up a calf-rearing farm alongside a fully computerized 'tabela'.
"Our farm has 24-hour water, cooling system, fodder chaffing machines 
and other things but we now want to adopt Israeli technology where 
rotary units will milk cows automatically and also indicate the fat 
content," says Ramilaben. The modernization will cost Rs 1 crore.
Ramilaben is an inspiration to other women
 in Gujarat who are the backbone of the dairy industry. Out of the total
 16,117 milk societies, 2,124 are run by women. Of the 31.8 lakh members
 in 15 district unions, 8.2 lakh are women.
"A quarter of our 
total members are women but their contribution to the productivity of 
the dairy sector is much more," says R S Sodhi, managing director of the
 Gujarat Co-operative Milk Marketing Federation (GCMMF) that markets the
 brand Amul.



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