Thursday, March 14, 2019
Spoilage Rates
India Agriculture despoliation Data Per 2010FAOworld agriculture statistics, India is the worlds largest maker of many fresh reapingsand vegetables,milk, majorspices, select fresh unions, select fibrous crops much(prenominal) asjute, some(prenominal) staples such asmilletsandcastor oilseed. India is the second largest winr of wheatand sift, the worlds major sustenance staples. India is to a fault the worlds second or third largest producer of severaldry fruits, agriculture-basedtextileraw materials,rootsandtubercrops,pulses, farmed search,eggs,coconut, sugar caneand numerousvegetables.India ranked within the worlds five largest producers of everyplace 80% of agricultural produce items, including manycash cropssuch ascoffeeandcotton, in 2010. India is also one of the worlds five largest producers of livestock and poultry means, with one of the fastest proceeds rates, as of 2011. India exported around 2 billion kilograms each of wheat and rice in 2011 to Africa, Nepal, Bang ladesh and other regions of the world. Aquaculture and catch fisheryis amongst the fastest growing industries in India.Between 1990 and 2010, Indian fish capture harvest doubled, while aquaculture harvest tripled. In 2008, India was the worlds sixth largest producer of marine and freshwater capture fisheries, and the second largest aquaculture farmed fish producer. India exported 600,000 metric tonnes of fish returns to nearly half of all the worlds countries. Lack of chilliness repositing and harvest despoilation causing over 30% of farmers produce going to waste, India lacks ratty storage, food packaging as well as safe and efficient rural transport system.This causes one of the worlds lastest food despoliation rates, in particular during Indian monsoons and other adverse weather conditions. Food travels to the Indian consumer by dint of a slow and inefficient chain of traders. Indian consumers get agricultural produce in suburban markets known as sabzi mandi such as one shown or from roadside vendors. As per the report by Shri M. S. Swaminathan (Planning Commission 1981), up to 40% of certain fruits and vegetables go waste out-of-pocket to their perishable nature and non-availability of appropriate post harvest stem. As per nother bring (TIFAC 1996), wastage in certain food is as high as over 30% and in vegetables the losses are up to 20% to 30% at the post harvest stages due to poor storage, transportation, lack of beneathstructure and the inadequacy of the marketing set-up. As per this report, India wastes more fruits and vegetables than are consumed in a country like U. K. The total wastage in all food sectors is high and worth Rs. 500,000 million. It is also estimated that the wastage woo of fruits and vegetables is Rs. 350,000 millions per year which is four to five clock than those of food grains.Even in food grains the loss is reckoned at 5-10% on beak of insect infestation and inadequate storage. Types of Food Spoilage Food spoilag e and contamination are defined as those adverse changes in lineament caused by the action of specific conditions or agents that induce physical and chemic changes and also allows micro-organisms, insect, bird and rodent pests. Mechanical damage is also subservient in spoilage. Bruises and wounds are such defects, which frequently cause chemical and microbic spoilage.The primary causes of food spoilage include the following Biological these include micro-organisms like bacteria, yeasts and molds, and other agents like insects, rodents and birds Chemical these include enzymatic or non-enzymatic reactions Physical these include breakage, bruises, crushing and cut or otherwise dismembered surfaces account 2 depicts the Food Pipeline and summarises the physical and biological ways of circumstance of food loss. Meat and Poultry Processing The production of meat is steadily increasing with an annual production of 4. million tonnes, which is contributed mainly by pigs followed by sheep, goat, buffalo and poultry meat. Meat producing industry in India is largely limit to the unorganised sector and there is very limited upgradation of technology. The constraints are absence of farms for rearing meat producing animals and absence of cold-chain facilities. The market for scientifically and hygienically produced meat products is expected to grow rapidly due to constantly developing urbanisation. As a result of changing lifestyles, the21 bring for readytocook food is growing rapidly.Overall very little of meat production is scientifically produced, svelte and packaged as branded products. Most meat consumed in India is in fresh form. Less than 1% of meat is processed into value-added products like sausages, ham, bacon, lunch meat, kababs meat balls etc. Figure 6 gives the production of meat and meat products. Lack of cold chain demand makes the cold chain infra costly (more demand more competition lesser price), the additional cost (in comparison with no n cool chain products) eventually gets loaded on the products serviced through high cost cold chain.Now, if supposedly some inferior product is available at a lesser price, very few in India shall buy a superior product serviced through cold chain, particularly when product in question is considered fresh only when it comes outside the controlled ambience (read cold strain). Remember fresh peas here sells Rs 150 a kg during off seasons against frozen at Rs 50 Kg. You need to have customers. Therefore, I am of the view that future demand for cold chain in India shall be driven not by fresh foods but by foods and pharmaceutical categories which compulsorily requires cold chain.Ready to eat frozen products, frozen vegetables, import fruit etc comes to mind here. If these categories grow in India infra to handle this shall automatically grow. Increased reaping of cold chain shall drive down the cold chain price for more adopters to follow, reducing the cost. I can forbid a strong correlation between cold chain growth with growth of microwave ovens. At the end of the day it is all about markets. It is not only the demand of right products that hinders the growth of cold submit industry in India, services too share equal blameFew long time back we built a world class cold storage infra for potatoes and apples at the only clock auction market for fruit and vegetables in India. This cold stores had all the modern bells and whistles like pallets, forklift, screw compressors et al. hold up what happened. Third party apple storage for trading at this store turned out to be a non-starter as apple trading in India is based on samples for small lots which could not be drawn out for inspection by traders as quickly as they are drawn out in an ambient environment or a traditional cold store.Moral of the story. Trades service demand dictate the cold storage needs. FTA agreements July 23, 2012 The Honourable Ed Fast, Minister of international Trade and Minister for t he Asia-Pacific Gateway, today met with representatives of the Canada-India Business Council in Montreal, where he highlighted the give of a fifth round of negotiations toward a Canada-India trade agreement.A Canada-India joint try concluded that a trade agreement between the two countries could pass on Canadas economy by at least $6billion. write http//www. thestar. com/news/world/article/1176287india-s-wheat-left-to-rot-due-to-lack-of-storage http//anilchopra. com/blog/personal/why-cold-storage-industry-is-not-growing-in-india/ http//smallb. in/sites/ indifference/files/knowledge_base/best_practices/RoleofplasticsinconservationofFoodResources. pdf
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