Indian Railways’ Jammu division has achieved a historic first by successfully delivering Amul dairy products via a dedicated freight train from Gujarat to Jammu and Kashmir, strengthening food security and supply chain efficiency in the region.
The special 20-wagon BCN (container) train, loaded with approximately 1,000 tonnes of essential dairy items, departed Linch Goods Shed in Ahmedabad division on April 20, 2026. It reached Bari Brahmana goods shed with 10 wagons (500 tonnes) and Anantnag goods shed with the remaining 10 wagons (500 tonnes), marking the inaugural rail shipment of Gujarat Cooperative Milk Marketing Federation (Amul) products to the union territory.
The consignment included toned milk, milk powder, buttermilk, lassi, and other staples, ensuring round-the-clock availability for consumers across Jammu and adjoining Kashmir Valley areas. Senior Divisional Commercial Manager Uchit Singhal described the arrival as a “proud and historic moment,” highlighting how direct rail connectivity substantially cuts transportation costs and transit times compared to conventional road routes.
This initiative underscores Indian Railways’ expanding role in cold-chain logistics for perishable goods, leveraging refrigerated BCN containers to maintain product integrity over the 1,800+ km journey. The service aligns with Gati Shakti’s multimodal push, complementing recent records like CONCOR Area 1’s rail cargo peaks and Maharashtra’s ULIP integration for real-time tracking.
For Jammu & Kashmir’s markets, the rail link promises price stabilisation and reduced dependency on trucked supplies vulnerable to highway disruptions. Amul’s entry strengthens commercial ties between Gujarat’s dairy belt and northern markets, potentially scaling to weekly frequencies as demand grows.
The milestone arrives amid broader logistics momentum: wheat export quotas doubling to 5 million tonnes boost grain rakes from Mundra/Kandla, while Sagarmala Finance’s $1 billion fundraise fuels port expansions. Vizhinjam’s 100-ship queue during Hormuz tensions highlighted rail’s resilience, now extending to dairy cold chains.
Railway authorities plan more such services, targeting 15% perishable cargo shift from roads by FY27. Western Railway flagged off the train, with Jammu division coordinating seamless unloads. This Amul run signals rail’s pivot from bulk to value-added logistics, supporting Atmanirbhar Bharat’s supply chain localisation while serving remote regions efficiently.
As EU CBAM pressures steel/auto exports, agri-dairy rail bridges offer sustainable alternatives—lower emissions (80% vs trucks) and faster evacuations via DFC spurs. The Jammu-Kashmir delivery cements rail’s role in nutritional security, blending GCMMF’s cooperative model with IR’s network for pan-India reach.






