Fruits and Vegetables (F&V) Supply Chains in India
Download
Report
Transcript Fruits and Vegetables (F&V) Supply Chains in India
Fruits and Vegetables (F&V) Supply Chains in
India: Emerging Models and Issues
Meeta Punjabi
Vijay Sardana
FAO & MoA
New Delhi, India
Outline
Background of the Study
Literature Review: Situation in other Developing Countries
Emerging Models
Requirements for setting up Supply Chains
Issues in Setting up the Chain
Areas of Intervention by Govt. agencies/donor groups
Examples: Co-ordination between different players in setting
up the chain (Role of Govt, NGO, Credit, supermarket chains)
Background of the Study
The marketing of F&V in India is changing dramatically
Change from the traditional markets to modern formats
Entry of big retail names – Reliance, ITC, Aditya Birla Group,
Godrej, Bharti Airtel, Adani Group
Initiation of organized retailing and wholesaling of F&V:
Reliance Fresh, Chopal Fresh, Namdhari’s Fresh
FAO and MoA undertook the current study to understand the
ground situation
Emerging models for backward and forward linkages
Issues in setting up the chains
Literature Review
The perception of retail chains being a phenomena of the
developed countries has changed significantly
Significant presence in developing countries – Latin America,
Asia, Africa
What does retail chains have to do with development?
Development perspective: farmers involved in modern value chains
earn much higher by bypassing the traders
Large and medium farmers have the resources to meet the requirements
of the chains, easier to co-ordinate
Development efforts: linking small farmers to these chains
Emerging Models
Co-operative (HOPCOMS, Karnataka; Mother Dairy, Delhi)
Exports with EUREPGAP Certification (Namdhari Fresh,
Bharti Airtel)
Farm to Fork -- Complete Chain (Godrej, Reliance, ITC)
Wholesaling – (Adani Fresh, Metro)
Front end – Convenience Stores (Food Bazaar, 3Cs)
Economy Stores (Subhiksha)
Requirements for Setting Up the Chain
Infrastructure (Back end to front end)
Collection center
Soil-testing Laboratory
Packing House/Distribution Center
Packing infrastructure -- tables
Cold-Storages
Transportation – Refer trucks
Retail outlets
Real estate
Investment in refrigeration facilities at the stores
Requirements for Setting Up the Chain
Knowledge Inputs
Extension advice to farmers:
use of different varieties
production techniques
harvesting (time of harvesting, harvesting techniques)
grading/sorting, packaging
Setting up Grades and Standards for purchase by the company
Training staff at packing centers (grading, sorting, packing)
Post-harvest experts (handling and storing needs of different
F&V)
Cold Storage Technology (?)
Packaging Technology for Fresh
Requirements for Setting Up the Chain
Co-ordination
Developing linkages with farmers
Inputs for farmers (Credit, seed, fertilizers, pesticides,
harvesting tools, packaging materials)
Information flow
Communication regarding the quantity and quality needs in the
company
Communicating the requirements to the farmers
Issues in setting up the chains
Developing linkages with farmers
Post-harvest manpower
Commitment from farmers
Infrastructure (level of operation, not everyone needs to invest
or can invest in packing house)
APMC Act (paper work, operational hindrance, time involved,
grading, sorting, packaging)
Farmer’s training in pre-cooling, storing, grading, sorting,
packaging
Packaging technology for fresh
Areas of Intervention by Govt/Donor Groups
Create an enabling policy environment that promotes mutually beneficial
partnerships between farmers and organized sector
To give credibility to the project (low faith/fear) in dealing with
corporations,
Develop linkages with small farmers
Training to farmers regarding post-harvest issues
Investment in Infrastructure: Not all firms dealing in fresh fruits and
vegetables have the level of operations to set up cold stores and packing
houses. To give a level playing field to the smaller firms, govt. investment
in cold storages and packing houses will be useful.
Investment in transportation infrastructure – refer trucks, (import taxes?
subsidy?)
Air-port infrastructure for shipping, cold-storages,
Example (USAID)
USAID/Michigan State University Partnerships in Food Industry
Development in Nicaragua, (Weatherspoon and Membreño, 2004).
US university facilitates the market connections for small
farmer organisations with the local supermarket chains,
NGOs (Technoserve) provide technical assistance
Supermarket chains -- CSU and La Colonia provide the
guaranteed market
Donor funds from USAID provide the financing.
The project has a graduation policy whereby the small farmer
organisations progressively take over the needed investments
and then maintain the market link themselves
Example
Governments, NGOs, and donors can facilitate tri- or quadripartite relationships that facilitate smaller farmer
participation.
Example, melons in Indonesia, Reardon (2004)
Small farmer organisation (Makar Buah),
Supermarket chain (Carrefour),
Seed/chemical company (Syngenta),
Government extension programme,
Specialised/dedicated wholesaler (Bimandiri)
Carrefour provided guaranteed market, Syngenta the
financing, and the wholesaler the intermediation and
coordination