The coconut conundrum: how to scale up sustainable production? – USAID
Home
Services
Apply
News
Events
Research
Team
Jobs
Contact
Home
Services
Apply
News
Events
Research
Team
Jobs
Contact
The coconut conundrum: how to scale up sustainable production?
The coconut conundrum: how to scale up sustainable production?
By Phuong Tran
Posted March 27, 2019
In News
The coconut conundrum: how to scale up sustainable production?2019-03-272019-03-27https://greeninvestasia.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/horizontal_rgb_294_white.pngUSAIDhttps://greeninvestasia.com/wp-content/uploads/istock-482465597.jpg200px200px
Tweet
BANGKOK,
March 21, 2019 – Coconut
consumption continues to grow globally, increasing the nut’s profile as a safe
food alternative, even reaching superfood status in some circles. According to the Asian and Pacific
Coconut Community, an inter-governmental trade group, exports of coconut water
from the Philippines almost doubled from 647,000 liters in 2008 to 1.8 million
liters in 2010, before multiplying to 61 million liters in 2015.
Against a backdrop of growing demand, USAID Green Invest Asia and one of the world’s largest cocoa producers and processors, Barry Callebaut, co-organized an industry meeting on sustainable coconut and coconut oil in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, on March 7. Some 49 companies representing over 40 percent of global coconut oil volumes attended, including some of the industry’s largest product buyers, as well as investors and non-profit organizations (NPOs) working with farmers. Attendees discussed ways to collaborate pre-competition on how to safely ramp up production when the growing cycle is so long, farmers are often poor and current productivity of trees is widely regarded as low.
Gregory Bardies, Barry Callebaut sustainability manager.
The problem with double-digit rising
demand for coconut water, sugar and oil – mostly from China, the United States
and several European countries – is lack of high-producing coconut trees to
supply that demand, said Ponciano
Batugal, chair of a technical working group with the intergovernmental body,
International Coconut Community, based in the Philippines.
“We are facing a time bomb, with 50
percent of the world’s coconut trees senile [too old] with low productivity,” Batugal
said. In the Philippines alone- which produces 27 percent of globally exported
coconut- production declines in the past three years have been attributed to
aging coconut trees.
Despite rising
demand, the price farmers receive for their coconuts has fallen to the point of
not being viable for most. According to the Wildlife Conservation Society, which uses community patrols to
monitor deforestation, there is a risk in the short term of farmers abandoning coconuts – which
some already have – and in the longer term, cultivating different cash crops in
ways that encroach on protected forests, erode the soil and increase carbon
emissions.
Global Interest in coconuts grown in an
environmentally and socially responsible way (known as sustainable coconuts)
has grown, yet the industry still does not have a widely accepted definition of
what makes coconuts sustainable.
“I have rarely seen a product with so much potential, but such low investment,” said Agathe Laville, a global commodities analyst manager with Barry Callebaut. “But we need to work together to make it sustainable.”
Participants noted how an over-complicated supply chain with profit-taking middlemen is one challenge to boosting yields and profits. Farmers’ inadequate knowledge about smart (sustainable) agricultural planting methods, insufficient access to finance, and poor cooperation among different parts of the supply chain are other contributing factors.
Initiatives to help coconut farmers get
better pricing and production, jointly backed by companies and NPOs, are
already underway. But more is needed, says Christy Owen, with USAID Green
Invest Asia.
The Livelihoods
Fund is trying to reduce the role of middlemen by connecting farmers directly
with a local buyer, Franklin Baker, to improve pricing. Global food companies
Mars and Danone along with the fragrance company Firmenich and the French
energy company, Veolia, invested $45 million to improve sourcing, investing in
young farmers, creating small and medium enterprise processors, and investing
in crop diversification.
On the finance side, the Philippine financial institution, Agronomika, working with a Dutch development bank, FMO, lends to farmers to help them plant cacao and intercrop, and estimates participating farmers have tripled their incomes over the past decade.
“No one company can achieve sustainability goals alone,” said Owen. “The only way for companies to thrive is if farmers thrive. And the only way farmers thrive is if the land thrives. For that, we need a complete transformation in how different actors of the coconut industry work with each other – and with the land.”
Event report available upon request.
Tweet
Recent PostsUSAID Launches Smallholder Rubber Finance FindingsHow Intercropping can Boost Asia’s Agriculture Yield and Profits – EIU studyUSAID Supports Cambodian Banks’ Gender-lens InvestingUSAID, Barry Callebaut Spearhead Sustainable Coconut Charter
USAID Green Invest Asia is a facility of the United States Agency for
International Development (USAID) and is implemented by Pact in collaboration with Mekong Strategic Partners.
USAID Green Invest Asia is a facility of the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and is implemented by Pact in collaboration with Mekong Strategic Partners.
2020 All rights reserved by USAID Web Design by Sphere Digital Marketing Agency. Privacy Policy
2020 All rights reserved by USAID – Web Design by Sphere Digital Marketing Agency.
| Privacy Policy
Home
Services
Apply
News
Team
Contact
The information provided on this Web site is not official U.S. Government information and does not represent the views or positions of the U.S. Agency for International Development or the U.S. Government.