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Major Issues of Reducing Post-Harvest Losses from Farm Gate to Storage

Major Issues of Reducing Post-Harvest Losses from Farm Gate to Storage. Tony Shih- Hsun Hsu National Taiwan University Aug. 5, 2013. OUTLINE. Major Trends in Agriculture Issues on Returns to Scale Supply Chain Management

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Major Issues of Reducing Post-Harvest Losses from Farm Gate to Storage

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  1. Major Issues of Reducing Post-Harvest Losses from Farm Gate to Storage Tony Shih-Hsun Hsu National Taiwan University Aug. 5, 2013

  2. OUTLINE • Major Trends in Agriculture • Issues on Returns to Scale • Supply Chain Management • Issues on Agribusiness: The Quiet Revolution in Staple Food Value Chains • Issues on Sustainability: Cost/Benefit Analysis • Agricultural Policies on Reducing Losses: A Food Value Chain View

  3. Major trends in agriculture

  4. During the first ten years of the 21st Century, we have witnessed a rapid transformation in the face and practice of agriculture, one of the oldest enterprises in human civilization. Among the major new developments or trends are:

  5. Commercialization • Agricultural production is merging with agribusiness, food supply chain management, and operating at ever-increasing scales with greater efficiency and profit. • Agriculture is moving from labor intensive toward more capital intensive enterprise.

  6. Globalization • Trade and exchange of products are becoming even more active. • Treaties such as WTO, FTA, TPP and RCEP are having far-reaching effects on the agriculture. • Multi-national companies with international production and marketing are becoming the key players.

  7. Science and Technology • Science- and technology-driven agriculture is critical for survival and success. • Biotechnology, in particular, will be part of the solution to deal with issues such as food safety, food shortages, etc.

  8. Environmental Protection • Excessive use of chemical fertilizers and agro-chemicals are increasingly problematic to the environment. • The larger scale of crop and animal production today has a negative impact on land, air, and water quality. • Solutions to these problems— new regulations and environmentally-friendly technologies—are not only increasing in demand, but also becoming a necessity for sustainable agricultural development.

  9. Energy production • With oil price increase and increasing concern about global climate change, governments, industries, and research institutes around the world have stepped up research to decrease the use of fossil fuels and to invest in clean, renewable energy sources, including bio-ethanol, bio-diesel, biogas, and biomass. • For the production of these bio-fuels, the agricultural system—with its scale, infrastructure, and logistics—is uniquely qualified to offer cost-effective solutions. • This will be a new and vital aspect of agriculture in the 21st Century.

  10. Major Issues of Reducing food loss/waste are embedded in the trends in agriculture • Food loss refers to the decrease in edible food mass at the production, post-harvest and processing stages of the food supply chain, mostly in developing countries. • Food waste, a symptom of developed countries' consumer lifestyles, refers to the discard of foods at the retail and consumer levels. • This food wastage represents a missed opportunity to food security and comes at a steep environmental price.

  11. Issue on returns to scale

  12. According to Thomas Reardon’sResearch past 10 years on China, Bangladesh, India, Indonesia, Philippines, Vietnam On eve of Green Revolution, debate in these countries on development path to choose: • large-farm development path • with supporters saying large estate farms = fast development • supporters saying (1) there are no good technologies for small farms; (2) and small farms won’t adopt new technologies

  13. “small farm development path” With supporters saying • Green Revolution provides technology that makes small farmers as or more productive than large estate farms • small farm path fits “land scarce, labor abundant” situation • failure of big collective farm (early) path of China • small farm path promotes “broad-based rural income growth” • Via local production linkages • Via local consumption linkages

  14. c) All six countries adopted “small farm development path” starting with the Green Revolution in the 1970sto now: • massive investments in rural infrastructure • massive investments in wholesale markets • massive investments in agriculture R&D and extension • gradually gave land control rights to small farmers as incentive to invest long-term • liberalized food markets to create incentive for small farmers to invest and modernize

  15. Supply chain management

  16. Segmentation of Production • Production is “sliced and diced” into separate fragments. • “Global value chain” - The possibility of slicing up and optimizing value chain activities among multiple companies and various geographical locations • In these chains, core activities are organized as separate but coordinated phases.

  17. Segmentation of Production • Food supply chain: farmers, farm input suppliers, traders, mills, cold storages, and retailers • With specialization in specific tasks and their close integration into a highly coordinated business model, these chains of related activities result in the creation of more “added value” than the sum of the value of the constituent parts and processes.

  18. Segmentation of Production • Today’s most integrated value chains combine two interlinked business models: a demand chain and a supply chain

  19. Schematic presentation of a value chain

  20. Definition of Supply Chain “All activities involved in sourcing and procurement, conversion, and all logistics management activities. Importantly, it also includes coordination and collaboration with channel partners, which can be supplies, intermediates, third-party service providers, and customers.” - Council of Supply Chain Management Professionals (CSCMP)

  21. Definition of Supply Chain • Coordinating the timely operation of industrial networks is a complex exercise, involving the provision of logistic services and supported by advanced information and decision system (e.g., infrastructure services). • Outsourcing v.s. Insourcing

  22. With specialization in specific tasks and their close integration into a highly coordinated business model, these chains of related activities result in the creation of more “added value” than the sum of the value of the constituent parts and processes.

  23. Vertical Integration • Vertical integration is about corporate strategy and relates to the “make” or “buy” decision companies invariably face. • While outsourcing is an example of the “buy” approach (act of purchasing from an external supplier), vertical integration involves an “insourcing” or “make” option (choice of producing an item or keeping a specific activity internally).

  24. Vertical Integration • Reduced operational costs and better coordination of the supply chain are the key benefits sought by vertically integrated enterprises. • Vertical integration can be achieved not only through direct ownership, but also by means of contracted relationships (at “arm’s length”) with suppliers. • Outsourcing and “Market failure”

  25. An example of vertical integration

  26. Innovation and Best Practices in Agricultural Production-The Case of DouNan Farmers’ Association in Chinese Taipei

  27. Business Weekly Cover’s Story • 15 young farmers constitutes the farming team • Each can earn 3 million NTD (100,000 USD) per year Business Weekly

  28. Case Study - DouNan Farmers’ Association (FA) Yunlin County, DouNan Town • Total Population: 47,000 • FA members: 9,107 • safety labeling system demo in 2003.

  29. Custom Farming Teamin DouNan

  30. Innovations and Policies • Innovations in farming system • Satellite System • Supply Chain Management • Strategic planning to add product values • Modernization in Post-harvest Processes • Adopting Good Agricultural Practices (GAP) • Zero post-harvest losses with recycling • Policies • “Small Landlord & Big tenant” Program • Encourage old farmers to retire early

  31. Satellite System (1/2) • Concept: In a district with agricultural structure of satellite system responsible for marketing and planning. Marketing Products farmer farmer Farmer’s Association Process Storage Package Market Super market Export Custom farming team Planning Information farmer farmer

  32. - Satellite System (2/2) Tenant farmer FieldManagers (6 people) Sales Group Farmers’ association (3 people) Custom Farming Machinery operator (6 people) harvest inform Lease Land Manage Sale Cultivate Domestic Supermarkets landlord Management Production Marketing landlord Foreign Market landlord • Responsible for leasing farm land. • Monitoring crop growth, Traceability Till, fertilize, sow, harvest with mechanical power Efficient soil conservation practices Use cold storages to provide off-season products for better price Direct marketing to reduce transaction costs

  33. Issue on agribusiness:the Quiet Revolution in staple food value chains

  34. Issues of Reardon’s research on the 6 countries: • What progress have they made in “small farm modernization”? • What progress have they made in developing supply chains from small farms to domestic market (95% of the food market in Asia), especially the rapidly growing cities (urban areas are 75% of food market in Asia) and export markets?

  35. Summary of findings based on detailed survey evidence • In past 10 years in the 6 countries • large sample surveys in all segments of food supply chains (farmers, farm input suppliers, traders, mills, cold storages, and retailers) • nearly 10,000 farmers and supply chain actors surveyed

  36. Found surprising findings:  rapid and widespread modernization AND diversification of small farms • rapid modernization of food supply chains .. … upstream from farm: in supply of inputs and services to farms, … downstream, services after the farm-gate, in wholesale, processing, and retail … with small farms benefited, “sandwiched” between the modernizing upstream and downstream

  37. 1) Rapid modernization of small farms (1-3 hectares) • Rapid Commercialization of small farms shifted from subsistence farms to “small commercialized farms” - selling 70-90% of output • small farms rapidly becoming “small businesses” • Rapid Intensification of small farms  Shifted into high use of new varieties, purchased seed, fertilizer, pesticide, herbicide

  38. Rapid mechanization of small farming: rapid shift to high use of farm machinery to free labor from grain farming to higher income activities (horticulture, rural nonfarm jobs) - very rapid increase in rental of machines - very rapid development of “farm machine services small enterprises: rice harvest services;mango sprayer-traders

  39. 2. Rapid Diversification of Small Farms • Small farmers: “climbing the value ladder”! • Shifting from rice/wheat  into vegetables, fruit, fish, livestock, dairy, grams/pulses (Earn 4-8 times more than in rice farming) • Shifting from low-quality rice  high quality rice (50-100% higher returns) (Vietnam, China) • Shifting from just farm income  to farm + rural nonfarm income (now 50% of farm household incomes)

  40. 3) Quiet Revolution in food supply chains: upstream + downstream from farms • Mainly “grassroot” revolution: small/medium enterprises • Driven by private sector (not government intervention) • Emergence of 1000’s of small enterprises in input and services supply

  41. Rapid spread of “cold storages” • Rapid modernization of wholesale markets and traders! • Rapid modernization of rice mills • Spread of supermarkets in all 6 countries Supply chain development important because it forms 50-70% of food costs to consumers Very few post-harvest losses!

  42. Issue on SUSTAINABILITY- cost/benefit analysis

  43. Abundance of Agricultural Residues Availability Cane Rice Fruit and vegetable Forestry Wood, driftwood, shavings Palm

  44. ????? Biomass Refinement Logistics • Collection and transportation of available biomass

  45. Agricultural and Industrial Application of Biomass Briquette Greenhouse energy supply & CO2 Electricity Generation in furnace Dehydrated food Livestock feed and bedding Mushroom cultivation Biomass Briquette Biomass Transport Organic Cultivation and refinement Pulverize Activated charcoal for organic soil additive Sugar fermentation Versatile paper products Health Food Storage High yield biomass pulp Hydration

  46. Biomass Crusher & Dust Remover Biomass Dryer Palm EFB Press & Broker Oil Palm Waste Mobile Briquette System Briquette Machine Feeding System Shredded size Forest Waste Wood Waste Broker Biomass Briquette Biomass Boiler Sugar Cane Bagasse From Sugar Mill Stover Shredder Briquette Packing & Consumer Produce Rice Straw, Grass Counter Pressure Turbine & ORC Biomass Power Generator Stover Balling Industrial Park User Corn Stover

  47. Baling and Shredding on Site

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