August 29, 2017: The consumer awareness has improved worldwide regarding the quality and standards of fruits and perishables. In the modern age with higher connectivity networks and enhanced technology tools in place, it ensures perishables retain its freshness even if transported across continents. The producers of fruits, vegetables, seafood are taking further steps to meet the consumer demands from the international markets.

It is not the efforts of producers alone to deliver quality and quantity to the consumers. But the freight forwarders, logistics companies and the operators all join hands in this endeavour.

The latest example is the Turkish Cargo starting service between Bodrum-Kuwait to carry fresh fish shipments. The direct flight ensured the delivery of the fish bred in Bodrum to the consumers in Kuwait within the same day by preserving the freshness and quality.

According to Panalpina, A Swiss forwarding and logistics company, five countries are showing new ambition when it comes to exporting fresh produce.

Zimbabwe
Judging by its top exports, listed by the Observatory of Economic Complexity as gold, raw tobacco, ferroalloys, diamonds, and raw sugar, you wouldn’t exactly expect Zimbabwe to be a successful producer of raspberries, blueberries and asparagus, the latter being a traditional Latin American product. But good weather conditions and increased foreign demand are pushing growth.

High-value crops such as raspberries, blueberries and stone fruit are grown in the northern Mashonaland province, in the Midlands and the southern Masvingo province. Most of the country’s perishables are exported to supermarket chains in Europe, particularly in the UK. Many local producers see growth opportunities and would like to tap more into Western markets as they plan to expand production.
#Fact: In Zimbabwe, Blueberries pay 10 times more than tobacco.

Angola
Prior to the 1975-2002 civil war, which disrupted agricultural production and displaced millions of people, Angola was a major fruit exporter and self-sufficient in all crops except wheat. Nowadays, oil represents an overwhelming 91 percent of the country’s exports, followed by diamonds at 5 percent. However, the country is now taking advantage of its very fertile soil and varied micro climates for year-round production of citrus fruits.

90 percent of Angolan farms are small or medium-sized and dedicated to communal subsistence, but there is a range of governmental initiatives to help them cultivate high-value crops for export to Europe and Asia Pacific, too. The Benguela, Huambo, Huila, and Moxico provinces already host several citrus programs. Judging by its potential, Angola could be competing with South Africa as a fruit exporter in the near future.
#Fact: Angola cultivates only 10 percent of its 58 million hectares of agricultural land available.

Azerbaijan
Like Angola, crude petroleum and its derivatives are the top exports of Azerbaijan; sugar and nuts come next. But with its minimal unit production costs and optimal geographic conditions that include 9 out of 11 climatic zones, Azerbaijan, one of the earliest sites of human agricultural activity, wants to become a major exporter of perishables.

Roughly 40 percent of the working population is employed in agriculture, and although the prevalent small land plots parcelled out to individual farmers in post-Soviet land reforms may be seen as an obstacle to large-scale plantations, they are suitable for the kind of niche deals favoured in direct trade. Azerbaijani farmers are well-organised and working with governments and partners abroad. Fresh fruits such as blueberries, but also fresh vegetables, for example, salads, are promising export products and Azerbaijan puts the high priority on food safety standards that are in line with EU regulations. The country’s agricultural transformation is well under way. Since 2005, Azerbaijan has doubled its fresh fruit and berry production.
#Fact: Azerbaijan’s 2016 fruit exports amounted to 182,000 tons, up by 27 percent from 2015, while its vegetable exports increased by 35 percent.

Serbia
Meanwhile in Europe, although Serbia’s typical exports include cars, corn, insulated wire, and rubber tires, in fact, fruit production is one of the key sub-sectors of Serbia’s economy and is given a strategic treatment by the government. In 2015 the country was the largest provider of frozen fruit to France and Belgium and the second largest in Germany.

European retailers’ interest in Serbia’s newly established commercial production of blueberries is growing, and the country is now seen as a viable option to cover the often short supply of the fruit. Serbian producers with good know-how and the latest technologies aim to occupy the commercial window between the southern and northern European blueberry seasons. Thanks to the favourable micro climates in the regions of Mladenovac and Bajina Bašta in the west of the country, as well as in parts of the south, blueberries are being heavily planted. Only recently, Panalpina oversaw the first direct shipments of blueberries from Belgrade to retailers in the UK and Netherlands.
#Fact: In 2015 Serbia was the largest exporter of raspberries in the world, accounting for more than 21 percent of the global output.

Scotland
The Scots have traditionally been producers of crab and lobster – the earliest records of lobster fishing in Scotland date back to the 12th century, predating whiskey making. Scotland’s natural environment is a real selling point. Crustaceans are landed throughout the Scottish coast during the third and fourth quarters of the year, and most are exported live to markets in southern Europe. However, Asian markets and China, in particular, are taking an increasingly large share of the catch, as they consider the soft-shelled brown crab and lobsters to be some of the finest crustaceans, even though they provide less meat than the hard-shelled versions. The brown crabs were initially being sent frozen, but the appetite for fresh food has dramatically increased live air freight volumes.

According to Seafood Scotland, seafood now accounts for the biggest rise (26 percent year on year) in food exports.
#Fact: Food exports from Scotland to Asia have increased over 400 percent since 2007.

Be it crabs or berries, the global appetite for fresh food is big all year round, and ambitious producers all over the world are stepping up to the plate to meet the growing demand and guarantee continuous supply.

Courtesy: www.panalpina.com

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