ETF value chain analysis in dairy sector: objectives, rationale and expected results

Similar documents
Regional Livestock Sector, breeding industry and goals (Slovenia, Croatia, Serbia & Macedonia)

GOAT BREEDING IN MONTENEGRO Current status and prospective

Dragan Roganović. Kraljevo kajmak. Belgrade, Decembar 2008.

Value(s) based supply chains to meet organic consumers expectations - a case study from Austria Markus Schermer Christoph Furtschegger

Economic Opportunities and Job Creation AGRO-FOOD Sector

Women s economic leadership in agricultural markets

MARKET ASSESSMENT OF DAIRY INDUSTRY IN TANZANIA

POLICY SUMMARY: GOVERNMENT SUPPORT FOR ORGANIC SUPPLY CHAIN DEVELOPMENT OVERVIEW

Farmer s Market Legislation & Food Safety Regulations

Dairy value chains in East Africa

School milk programme Kenya

Dairy farming systems and development paths in Slovenia

TERMS OF REFERENCE FOR CONSULTANCY

Value chain promotion for economic. - An introduction into the concept of ValueLinks

Governance and Upgrading in Value Chains: Opportunities and Challenges

VIABLE EXTENSION APPROACH TO PROMOTE RURAL ECONOMIC EMPOWERMENT

Peru Cow Milk Market Production and Fluid Milk Consumption by Volume,

Adelaide Hills, Fleurieu & Kangaroo Island. Sustainable Growth For Food & Wine DAIRY

TERMS OF REFERENCE FEASIBILITY STUDY ON A SUPPLIER DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMME FOR AGRIBUSINESS IN KENYA

Farm Credit Canada Annual Report

KOSOVO Self-employment in rural areas through agriculture

Feedback Business Consulting Services Pvt. Ltd.

Romania. Organic Market Overview - Romania

Linkages in the Chicken Chain of Vietnam: A Case Study in Kim Dong District, Hung Yen Province

The effects of the EU enlargement on the milk sector in the Czech Republic and prospects of future development

Economic Contribution of Maine s Food Industry

THIS REPORT CONTAINS ASSESSMENTS OF COMMODITY AND TRADE ISSUES MADE BY USDA STAFF AND NOT NECESSARILY STATEMENTS OF OFFICIAL U.S.

Strategic and Structural Issues Facing the Irish Dairy Sector

Linkages in the Chicken Chain of Vietnam: A Case Study in Kim Dong District, Hung Yen Province

Situation and opportunities of dairy sector in Hungary and Latvia

Town of Alabama Agricultural and Farmland Protection Plan

INTERNATIONAL MEAT COUNCIL. Inventory of Domestic Policies and Trade Measures and Information on Bilateral. Plurilateral or Multilateral Commitments

SUMMARY STATISTICS. Crocus Expo IEC, Moscow

Business & Marketing : Marketing, Value Added and Value Chain

WP7: REPORT ON ORGANIC SECTOR in CROATIA

Application of Logistics Systems in Dairy Sector in Latvia

ADVANCED General Certificate of Education January Economics. Assessment Unit A2 1. Business Economics [AE211] FRIDAY 17 JANUARY, MORNING

Value Chain Report: West Java

Session 2. Competitiveness in the marketing and retail sectors

VIETNAM FOOD MARKET. By Mrs. Pranomsri Sormkunngoen Director of Thai Trade Center Ho Chi Minh city, Vietnam MARKET POTENTIALITY

The Impact of Agri-Business Processing Firms on the Local Economy

Canada s Dairy Industry at a Glance

K-SALES K-SALES. Kenya Semi-Arid Livestock Enhancement Support. Kenya Semi-Arid Livestock Enhancement Support Project

Livestock and livelihoods spotlight NIGERIA

Information-Sharing and Strategy by Food Industry Firms

3.3 Denmark (Mette Vaarst, Anne Braad Kudahl)

The hotel industry's import-dependence: The case of Croatia 1

Wattle Health Australia Limited Enters into Joint Venture with Organic Dairy Farmers of Australia Limited

Market Review of the Organic Dairy Sector in Wales, Executive Summary and Recommendations. Organic Centre Wales Better Organic Business Links

Value Chain Development and Employment creation

Africa Agribusiness Academy. Investing in knowledge for entrepreneurship

Milk Marketing As 472, AVS472 Fall 2016 John Swain. Milk Pricing and Markets. Milk Pricing is Complex

Tourism: A Strategic Approach Integrated Destination Management. Sarajevo, May 28, 2009 Sue Warren

Country Paper Presentation - Fiji ASIAN PRODUCTIVITY ORGANISATION

UNFSS workshop for ASEAN Clarkfield, Philippines, 24 October 2013 Presented by: Ulrich HOFFMANN, UNCTAD secretariat

Andreja Borec, Jernej Prišenk. University of Maribor. Faculty of Agriculture and Life Sciences. March - April 2015

Geneva, November 2007

Value of Food & Drink Industry to Northern Ireland

2 nd COMESA AGRO-INDUSTRY DIALOGUE

June Dairy Month Industry Relations Guide. Own, live and share the dairy story

Landscape of global agrofood GVCs: the place of China

IDAL & THE SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOALS (SDGS)

Encouraging Collective Farmers Marketing Initiatives Final Conference, 8 May 2008, Brussels

Economics 40 terms by RichardParkerMD TEACHER

ECONOMIC ANALYSIS. series-3 based on data from the Labor Force Surveys ( , , 2010), conducted by the National Statistical Office.

Contribution of Agribusiness to the Magic Valley Economy, 2010

A European Food Prices Monitoring Tool

Juno Awards, Calgary An Economic Impact Analysis. August 2008

Australian Agricultural and Resource Economics Society 51 st Annual Conference, Queenstown, New Zealand February 2007

Profit Margin Inequality Within the Food Supply Chain

for the Development of the Dairy Goat Industry

Regional Value Chains in East Africa. Ritwika Sen 12 th December, 2016 Trade, FDI & Regional Value Chains Workshop Kampala, Uganda

For personal use only

PRIMA Info and networking event 8 November 2017

Livestock sector in the region, policy in relation to food production and efficiency (Slovenia, Croatia, Serbia & Macedonia)

Andreja Borec, Jernej Prišenk. University of Maribor. Faculty of Agriculture and Life Sciences. March - April 2015

Who is more competitive in the dairy chain in India - formal vs. informal

Data Access and Publication of Results

Milk Marketing. As 472, AVS472 Fall 2015 John Swain. Resources. The Market Administrator s Report -

Looking to Lapland's past for a sustainable food source Soppela, Päivi Maarit

STDF PROJECT PREPARATION GRANT (PPG) APPLICATION FORM

DEVELOPMENT OF ORGANIC FARMING IN BULGARIA

USAID Agribusiness Project

JOBS IN MYANMAR: PROMOTING MORE AND BETTER JOBS CONSULTATIONS AROUND JOBS REPORT STRUCTURE

Presentation for Fostering integrated economic development through the sustainable use of natural resources and greening of value chains April 2017

NATIONAL REPORT ON AGRO- FOOD SECTOR CROATIA

Economic Contributions of Agricultural and Rural Electric Cooperatives in New York State Economy

Inclusive and coordinated approaches for sustainable food value chains

Sustainable Food Systems for Health: Jumpstarting the SDGs. Dr. Florence Egal City-Region Food Systems Alliance

Links between global agriculture and food value chains and jobs and growth

Estonia FooD and FooD safety

The Presiding Officers invite Parliamentarians and Staff to a Science Briefing on

Implications of European Policy Reforms on the U.S. Dairy Industry

Trading in Livestock and Livestock Products

Terms of Reference Pakistan Silage Case Study STA. Market Development Facility

European SMEs: HRD in the food, retail and tourism sectors: the case of some old and new Member States

The CTAHR Economic Issues publication EI-3,

Between successful development initiatives and institutional capacity shortcomings: the case of Trikala in Greece

ENTREPRENEURIAL DEVELOPMENT OF VALUE CHAINS A Kenya Dairy Sub-Sector Example

Transcription:

ETF value chain analysis in dairy sector: objectives, rationale and expected results Ummuhan Bardak European Training Foundation (ETF) Podgorica, 15 June 2012 1

Objectives and expected results Why the good quality dairy products from the North can not reach to the domestic market and particularly tourism sector in the South? How to create more jobs and/or higher income for dairy producers/ processors in the North by linking it with tourism sector of the South? What to improve in the value chain of dairy sector (special products, actors) for more employment creation in North? What are the specific skills and training needs for these jobs to make them viable and more profitable? Identification of challenges and opportunities in each segment of dairy value chain from North to South (from farmers to processors, traders and consumers) Development of policy recommendations to increase the added value of dairy chain, so as its income and employment contribution in the North 2

Rationale for the ETF proposal (1) Montenegro has a service-based economy (70% of GDP and 73% of total employment), particularly relying on tourism activities Booming tourism sector with an annual growth of sector at 12.4% per year in 2009 total tourism& travel income of 730m EUR (20.8% of GDP) 1.12 million foreign tourists expected to visit Montenegro in 2011, generating a direct income of 634m EUR 14.700 direct jobs created in the sector (9% of total employment), while indirectly reached to 29.300 jobs (17.8% of total employment) covering hotels, restaurants and travel agencies Creation of an additional 25.000 new jobs over the next 10 years, reaching to 62.000 jobs by 2021 (33.2% of total employment) Tourism concentrated in the South (coastal area) of Montenegro receiving most FDI investments, while the North has agro-tourism potential 3

Rationale for the ETF proposal (2) Job creation in tourism occurs in the South, providing little opportunity for the long-term unemployed in the North if they don t move A total of 17.000 people are employed in the agricultural sector (around 7% of total employment), contributing to 15% of GDP Agriculture and cattle farming are particularly important in the North-East regions: 70% of all farmers own cattle Sector with job potential for the long-term unemployed, but jobs are not satisfactory due to low income and poor working conditions Montenegro is net importer of agricultural and dairy products (annual >20 million euro spent for importing dairy products, esp. Serbia) Tourism sector in the South does not use local dairy products widely e.g. the problems of hygiene, food safety standards (and maybe marketing?) Necessity of high-quality and secured dairy supply for the success of hotels& restaurants and higher value added tourism sector 4

Rationale for the ETF proposal (3) Food processing industry: 6% of GDP, 3.6% of total employment: mainly beverages, followed by meat and dairy products Dairy sector: 8% of gross value added, 9% of total employment in food industry, only milk constituting 25% of gross agricultural output Dairy herd: 78,000-100,000 cows, 200 million litres milk production, by 26,300 dairy holdings (mostly small scale family business, 2-3 cows per family) 76% of milk production remain in farms, some sold in local market after onfarm processing, only 15% of total milk production sent to processing companies Dairy processing companies: a total of 15-19 enterprises, mostly small size, with daily processing of 1-20 tonnes of milk, yogurt as the main product Problems with the milk collection from farms, hygiene and food safety standards, marketing of processed products and local specialty products Closer attention to the distribution of processed milk and dairy products: wholesalers, retail chains, supermarkets, specialised shops, tourism sector 5

Linking dairy production with tourism sector If dairy production in the North meets commercial needs and customer tastes of tourism sector in the South, the benefits of tourism can be felt among the dairy producers/ processors: (i) to examine the backward linkages from the tourism sector (hotels& restaurants) in the South to the dairy production/ processing (milk and cheese) in the North (ii) to identify constraints and opportunities for the producers and processors in production, storage, processing, marketing and distribution of their products to be linked to the tourism value chain (iii) to find out the role of human resources, knowledge and skills in the whole value chain, and the type of HCD investment to increase opportunities of the long-term unemployed for more jobs and income 6

Methodology and coverage A study including both the analysis and recommendations through: Desk research: analysis of existing knowledge on the dairy sector in Montenegro, with particular focus on the Northern region Collection of recent statistics on dairy sector: its real and potential size in the national and regional economy Deep interviews with each segment of the value chain in dairy sector: farmers, processors, traders, and tourism consumers Critical focus on the position of North (11 municipalities) in the sector, and on milk and cheese (but not excluded yogurt and cream) Action points for employment creation, income increase and skills/ training needs, based on its trade links from the North to the South 7

Steps and timetable Expert team selected: Assist. Professor Liesbeth Dries (Wageningen University), Dr. Milan Markovic (Biotechnical Faculty Podgorica), ETF experts Analytical framework agreed: A study outline covering each segment of dairy value chain (farmers to processors, traders and consumers) Kick-off seminar organised on 15 June to present/ discuss analytical framework, methodology and preliminary findings of interviews Analysis to be completed by September and send for comments to the national stakeholders Validation seminar to be organised in November to present and discuss the findings of analysis (22 November, Thursday?) Involvement of national stakeholders (i.e. labour, agriculture, SME development agency) and coordination with international donors 8

Outline of the ETF value chain analysis An overview of the consumer-side of the dairy value chain in the retail sector in the South and the main food service actors in tourism An overview of the producer/ processing-side of the dairy value chain with focus on the North (in comparison with national context) An overview of cheese sub-sector and specialty local products with potential for niche markets Key actors and organisations involved in dairy sector (both at national and Northern region levels) and power relations Vision for the growth of dairy sector at national and Northern region levels: an analysis of opportunities and constraints Recommendations to improve the role / position of dairy value chain in the North for more employment and income creation 9

Kick-off seminar and expert presentations The objective of kick-off seminar: present/ discuss analytical framework, methodology and preliminary findings of first interviews, get feedback from the participants on the focus of analysis and suggestions for improvements Presentation of Liesbeth Dries: How to make a value chain analysis: the definition, methodology and expected benefits? What are the demand-side advantages of this analysis for more employment and income generation? Presentation of Milan Markovic: Value chains in the dairy sector of the North and in the tourism sector of the South: what are the main information sources and list of interviewees to be used? What are the preliminary results of first interviews conducted with local actors? 10