Title: Trends in the Global Food Industry
1Trends in the Global Food Industry
- Opportunities and Threats for Fresh and Processed
Produce Suppliers
2- Talk by Tom Reardon
- Michigan State University
- Twenty- Second Annual Agribusiness Management
Conference - Center for Agricultural Business
- California State University, Fresno
- October 28, 2003
31. Transformation of Retail - Globally
- Spread of supermarkets in the emerging, growth
markets Asia, Latin America, Central/Eastern
Europe - KEY demand growth regions for fresh and
processed produce
4- Supermarkets in food retail are about 70-80 now
in US and Europe - In Latin America 15 in 1990 ? 55 in 2000
- 3 out of 10 pesos spent by Mexicans on food are
spent in Wal-mart! - In Central Europe 25 in 1999, 50 in 2003!
5- China from a few supermarkets in 1992 to 6000 in
2002! - half of food retail in the 60 largest cities
6- Rapid consolidation of supermarket sector
everywhere - Top 5 chains in a given country
- 40 in the U.S. (up from 25 five years ago)
- 70 in France (2/3 global chains)
- 65 in Latin America (3/4 global)
7- Consolidation of procurement
- Shift to big Distribution Centers
- Ahold in East Coast
- Shift to specialized wholesalers and distribution
companies - Melissas / Wal-mart
- CS Wholesale Grocers / Ahold/US
8Shaws (Sainsburys) 480,000 sq ft DC in Maine
9- Shift to regional and global networks
- www.globalsources.com
- Procurement changes mean move to fewer, bigger
suppliers - and preference for ONE-STOP-SHOPPING from
supplier for variety of products in a category
10- Rise of tough private standards of quality and
safety - This week a major UK retailer announced WE DO
NOT CARE WHAT EU AND US GOVERNMENT NEGOTIATIONS
ON GMO LABELING COME UP WITH . - OUR CHAIN WILL REQUIRE GMO LABELING
11- EUREPGAP (reductions in pesticides on produce by
early 2004) - CIES Global Food Safety Initiative
- to harmonize food safety standards and
practices among retailers
12- CIES clout to implement global food safety
PRIVATE standards - Top 250 retailers
- Top 250 suppliers
13- members sales 2.8 trillion dollars
- (clout?)
- ? Converge of and increase in standards globally
142. Opportunities and Challenges from Rapid Change
in Markets
- Opportunities
- Rise of supermarkets integrates, de-fragments
food markets - ... Far easier targets to hit (story of snack
firm in Costa Rica)
15- If you can get in WOW!
- Shift to national DCs in China
Hualian-Lianhua, Wal-mart, Carrefour - story 3 melon growers in Brazil/Carrefour
16- Supermarkets in emerging markets are eager to
diversify, innovate - Supermarkets are the gateway to 1 billion middle
class consumers in these regions eager to buy
produce
17- Supermarkets in developing regions Market that
fuels growth of agribusiness sales - fresh-frozen carrots in supermarkets in
Singapore, Croatia, Chile, Brazil - massive growth of fresh-cuts in China and rest
of Asia market - imports of US produce
18Nicaraguan Supermarket with U.S. apples
19Michigan, Chilean, Washington, Oregon apples
HORTIFRUTI, Nicaragua
20Canadian and Californian onions sold to CARHCO
Supermarkets (in Nicaragua)
21- Threats/Challenges
- Broad consolidated procurement systems and
networks - allow chains to source over globe and get
cheapest and best quality - ? quantum leap in competition
- the days are gone of stable home markets or
captive niches
22- Global convergence in safety standards
- Chilean and Chinese food processors and packers
have already raced to get ISO and HACCP full
certification
23Typical Scene in Chile.. Or China
243. Opportunity and Threat Proliferation Globally
of World-Class Suppliers to Supermarkets
- Industry massive investments in production and
processing - Government investment in infrastructure
- since 1990 in Chile, China, Mexico, New
Zealand, Australia, South Africa - Long-distance supply enabled by
- Trade liberalization
- Improvement in distribution technology
25- Responding to rise in demand
- Adapting to deep transformation in retail in past
10 years. Chains want - Quality and Food Safety
- Diversity of products BUT One-Stop-Shopping from
suppliers - Year-round availability
- Low cost
26Example Tanimura and Antle
- Vegetables to supermarkets in Mexico
- Started a few years ago with bulk vegetables
- Quickly moved to value-added vegetable packs
- Rapid growth in shipments
27Example of XinCheng Foods, Shanghai
- 1997 on supermarket-market in China (200 stores
in 1992 to 6000 in 2002) - Vegetables and meat to chains in China, Korea,
Japan, Hong Kong - Certifications
- ISO 9001 (quality), HACCP (safety), Green Label
(low pesticide) No Pollution Label - Fresh cuts 150 tons, 97 ? now 1800!
28Example Global Berry Farms
- GBF, Florida, October 2000, LLC owned by
- Michigan Blueberry Growers Marketing
- Hortifrut, Chile raspberries, blackberries,
blueberries (35 of global bushberry off-season) - Naturipe, California strawberries
29- YEAR-ROUND (north and south)
- VOLUME required by big chains
- ONE-STOP-SHOPPING for diversity of berries
- High quality and safety
- Growers in California, Chile, Costa Rica,
Guatemala, Mexico, Michigan
304. Implications
- ? A key implication is the need to make timely
and substantial investments to stay in the game
31- but, given that key implication, can all keep
up? - the challenging and common now in every
country - story of ASUMPAL coop
32ASUMPAL Coop, Guatemala
- - Cooperative of 330 members in 2001
- Shift from roma to salad tomatoes
- Contract with McDonalds
- Stringent private standards
- Implied large investments
33- 2002 Membership from 330 to 30 to 6 today
- the 6 buying the land of the 300 who dropped
out - .. The 6 made investments and won