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14 rue du Rhone, 1204 Genève w Switzerland - tel. +41 22 900 1705 - [email protected]
Beef & Dairy ventures in the Caucasus and Central Asia
Joining forces to re-establish
the new Silk Road markets
Even though they are part of the same region and have shared a common Silk Road and Soviet past, the countries of the Caucasus and Central Asia have quite different levels of development
24'449 24'108
18'246 17'761
14'217
9'209 8'681 8'164
5'630 4'998
3'622 2'698
-
5'000
10'000
15'000
20'000
25'000
30'000
GDP per capita PPP USD 2014 (IMF)
However they have all experienced in the last decade a very strong level of growth, among the highest in the World
10,19,7
8,3
6,8
5,55,1
4,4 4,3
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
Turkmenistan Azerbaijan Uzbekistan Tajikistan Kazakhstan Georgia Kyrgyz Republic Armenia
Average GDP growth 2006-2015(%, source IMF/ADB)
As in many emerging countries which are responsible for 80% of the increase of beef and dairy worldwide according to OECD/FAO, strong growth in household income has led to a switch from the consumption of grain to value-added products: more fruit, vegetable, meat and dairy products as shown by the example of “rich” Azerbaijan
40
60
80
100
120
140
160
1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
Beef, milk and wheat consumption per capita in Azerbaijan(index 1992=100, FAOSTAT)
Wheat and products (kg/capita/year)
Bovine meat (kg/capita/year)
The levels of consumption of milk per capita still vary considerably inthe region. They reflect differences in income per capita and in modesof consumption between countries of former breeding nomads suchas Kyrgyzstan and countries of sedentary farmers such as Tajikistan
282
208
190 179 174
166 157
146 144 143 141 140 137 136
80
60 58 53
-
50
100
150
200
250
300
Consumption of milk excluding butter total, 2011, kg/capita/year (FAOSTAT)
The same applies to consumption for beef meat, for which Kazakhstan is already one of the biggest consumers in the World
22,1
18,7 18,4 18,3
16,215,1
13
10,3
8,6 8,5
6,75,8
4,9 4,83,9
1,3
0
5
10
15
20
25
Consumption of beef meat per capita (kg, FAOSTAT)
Even though Kazakhstan is probably close to its maximum in terms ofconsumption per capita, most countries of the region are expected tostill register large increase in demand in the future. This will also bethe case of close-by countries such as China and Iran
141
175
-
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
160
180
200
1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
Beef consumption in Azerbaijan (index 1992=100, FAOSTAT)
Bovine meat (kg/capita/year) Bovine meat (t)
Azerbaijan, that is not part of the ECU, has also seen a massive increase in its trade deficit for beef and dairy
-23'278 -24'580 -27'559
-41'048
-56'463
-65'862 -71'322
-89'812
-97'606
-170'392 -180'000
-160'000
-140'000
-120'000
-100'000
-80'000
-60'000
-40'000
-20'000
-
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 (mirrorstatistics)
Total beef and dairy (trade deficit of Azerbaijan, thousand USD, ITC)
One of the reasons for massive trade deficits in beef and dairyof the region has been its low level of tariff protection… untilthe Russian embargo!
10,28
15,00 15,00 15,00 15,00 15,00 15,00
3,43
20,00 20,00
9,7011,36 11,25 11,72
26,00
58,00
72,51
38,70
42,9044,69
32,20
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
Live bovineanimals 0102
Fresh bovine meat0201
Frozen bovinemeat 0202
Milk notconcentrated 0401
Milk concentrated0402
Butter 0405 Cheese 0406
Compared customs tariffs for beef and dairy products (%, 2013, source ITC)
Azerbaijan (apart from duty free CIS)
Euroasian Customs Union
EU Ad valorem equivalent tariff
The mountainous Caucasus and Central Asian countries have very good agro-pastoral natural conditions for beef.Not surprising that many European breeds came from there with migrations of Indo-Europeans thousands years ago
In countries like Tajikistan, Kirghizstan and the Caucasus, there is large availability of mountain pastures for ranching
Unfortunately, since that period, yields of cows in the region havestagnated or even decreased contrary to what happened inRussia and Ukraine
0
50
100
150
200
250
1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
Yields of milk/cow (kg/year, index 1992=100, FaoStat)
Azerbaijan Russia Ukraine
Yields for milk are now much below the levels of advanced countries of the region.
A Tajik cow produces the equivalent of a French goat!
6'414
4'447 4'361
3'900
2'970
2'317 2'2451'993 1'947 1'912
1'368
1'010723
0
1000
2000
3000
4000
5000
6000
7000
Yields of cow milk in 2013 (kg/cow/year, FAOSTAT)
Poor yields in the region reflect a structural mismatch:large increase in the number of animals, large decreasein the volume and quality of fodder resources
148
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
160
180
1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
Fodder crop production and number of animals in Azerbaijan
(index 1991=100, AzStat)Green maize
Fodder root crops
Hay
Total number of cattle and buffaloes
In most countries including Azerbaijan where the State provides 40% subsidy for investment in machinery, there has been drastic contraction for fodder equipment. What remains is usually outdated.
40883
13318
72788998
31874316
8915
4544
1624
23090
5507
7112051 1393 1727
8482218
616
0
5000
10000
15000
20000
25000
30000
35000
40000
45000
Tractors Ploughs Cultivators Seeders Mowers Presses Sprayers(pollinizators)
Combineharvesters
Silageharvesters
Stock of main agricultural equipment in Azerbaijan, end of the year (AzStat)
1990 2007 2014
The problem of access to equipment and fodder is not only a problem of financial resource: it is a problem of adequacy. In all countries of the region, households are now the owners of most of cows and cannot for instance invest by themselves in a modern tractor, not speaking of a modern silage harvester
43,0
31,1
6,31,5 1,4 0,8 0,3
11,5
2,7 1,06,1
48,946
66
93 9299
50
100
88
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
Russia 2015(ownership)
Ukraine 2015(ownership)
Moldova (2015) Tajikistan 2013(ownership)
Azerbaijan 2015(ownership of
family holdingsincluding
peasant farms)
Kirghizstan 2015(ownership)
Georgia 2014(ownership of
family holdingsincluding
peasant farms)
Kazakhstan2011 (milk
output, OECD)
Share of different types of farms in ownership or output of cattle(national statistics, %)
Large agricultural enterprises
"Peasant" farms
Households
Apart from households, so-called family “farmers” have often insufficient land resources to justify investing in equipment by themselves
6,6
17,5
15,5
14,2
8,7
10,3
4,7
5,8
2,9 2,7
1,6
9,6
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
16
18
20
0,00 – 0,50 0,51 – 1,00 1,01 – 1,501,51 – 2,00 2,01 – 2,50 2,51 – 3,00 3,01 – 3,503,51 – 4,00 4,01 – 4,504,51 – 5,00 5,01 – 5,50 5,51 – >
Farms holding land eligible for state support, percentage by size range ha (MoA)
On the other side of the value-chain, there is growing emergence of modern retailers such as Casino-Bravo or Baku Retail Group in Azerbaijan, Schiever-Auchan in Tajikistan, Ramstore in Kazakhstan
As elsewhere they need traceability between the fork of thefarmer and that of their clients. This means respect ofstringent food safety rules for large volumes and constantquality of beef and dairy products
How can we act?
By setting-up in the countries of the region, beginning with Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, and Tajikistan Development Hubs structured around large private “Nucleus” Farms implementing three tasks:
- Test in these farms new technologies with support from a platform of global providers of inputs and equipment willing to become leaders in the Caucasus and Central Asia
- Train in these farms a new generation of agronomists and zoo-technicians with support of training centers in advanced countries
- Transfer the knowledge acquired in these farms to small and medium farmers working with them in the following business model
Final buyer (large retailer)Signs a procurement contract with the Nucleus Farm to get
good quality meat on the basis of quality requirements
Nucleus FarmBuys calves and reform cows from small farmersfor bull fattening. Can be used to develop agenetic base upon demand for exporters ofgenetic. Helps small farmers to organizethemselves in cooperatives for tasks such asmarketing of milk or access to inputs andmachinery
Technical partnersTest their inputs/equipment in the Nucleus Farm and use it as a demonstration base to
conquer local markets
Local farmers including householdsReceive training on modern breeding techniques inthe Nucleus FarmSell their calves and cows for fattening to the farmSell their milk to their cooperative
CooperativeGathers farmers organized and
trained in the Nucleus FarmOrganize their access to inputs and equipment and to sell their
milk
This scheme is not a dream idea. It is already on track with a team of professional and experienced investors in agribusiness working together in various countries to build a common platform of knowledge
• Azerbaijan: use of a former warehouses in the region of Goranboy to be transformed into a large scale feedlot (nucleus farm). Large element of accumulated trust between the investors (O2 Agri led by Mr Fortunato Costantino) and local farmers. Strong support from Government that wants to provide the nucleus farm with 5,000 ha of land and development organizations
• Kazakhstan: use of a 10,000 ha farm in the region of Astana owned by the grain trader group Comstrade led by Mrs Lyazzat Nurumova to be transformed into a large scale feedlot (nucleus farm). Daughter projects in the regions of Akmola and Almaty
• Tajikistan: launching of Tajik farm LLC in 2011 by foreign investors led by MrWahid Jamai, the first foreign investor in the country. Acquisition of what was considered the best former Soviet complex for beef cattle (16,000 heads). Good accumulated experience in cross-breeding with Charolais, Abondance and Tarentaise
With technical support from experienced specialists, work has already begun to transform this local cow…
Do you want to join the club of pioneers who will conquer the new beef and dairy markets of the Silk Road by working together?
If yes…
14 rue du Rhone w 1204 Genève w Switzerland w tel. +41 22 900 1705 w [email protected]
Connect with us:
O2 Holding SA
rue de Rhone, 14 – 1204 Geneva (CH)
Tel +41 22 900 1705
Fax +41 22 900 1706
Mob +41 79 777 62 99
E-mail: [email protected]