Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program
Transcription
Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program
Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program Horticulture Strategy Development Background Document December 2009 Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program Agenda • Cluster Competitiveness Project Overview • Competitiveness Concepts and Principles • Components of Strategic Thinking • Export Benchmarking and Market Trends Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program 2 The Cluster Competitiveness Program (CCP) Private Sector Competitiveness Project (PSCP) Tanzania Private Sector Foundation (TPSF) Bus Dev Gateway CCP BEST – AC International consulting, training & policy expertise to improve competitiveness in select industries 3 year technical assistance program in 6 industries Year 1 start – first 3 industry clusters / value chains C/VC 1 C/VC 3 C/VC 2 Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program Matching Grants Pr Year 2 add – second 3 industry clusters / value chains C/VC 4 C/VC 5 C/VC 6 3 CCP Outcomes Outcome 1: Improved value chains and clusters • New linkages to domestic & int’l suppliers & customers • Adoption of int’l quality standards • Productivity training – new technology and/or methods Outcome 2: Enhanced local competitiveness capacity • Associations -- QA stds certification, cluster promotion • Universities/trng institutes – professional devlpmnt courses • BDS providers -- QA stds consulting, export mktg, new tech Outcome 3 – Accelerated pace of regulatory improvements • Policy research by industry experts • Building advocacy capacity in associations • Catalyzing stakeholders through PPP meetings and training Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program 4 Five CCP Program Components MAY Prog start JUN JUL AUG SEP OCT NOV DEC JAN FEB MAR TL Mobilz 1 – Conduct competitiveness diagnostics & assessments 2 – Identify three target clusters 3 – Craft cluster strategies 4 – Implement cluster strategies 5 – Build capacity to sustain cluster initiatives Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program 5 Component 1 – Conduct Competitiveness Diagnostics & Assessments • National Competitiveness Assessment – review business environment using World Bank DBR and WEF GCR indices – first step to gage a country’s state of competitiveness – solid macroeconomic growth, about average for peers – difficult business environment, e.g., licensing • Cluster & Value Chain Assessment – a detailed review of eight clusters for possible program participation Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program 6 Mapping the Economy - Illustrative Tourism Footwear Livestock Hides & Skins Textiles / Apparel Dairy Meat Pulp and Paper Transport/ Logistics Wood Products Packaging Oilseeds Finance Food Processing Telecom Chem, Plastic, Rubber Construction Materials Pharma Horticulture Iron & Steel Sisal Cashew Nuts Millets Banana Pulses Mining Health Maize Wheat Seaweed Metalworks Pyrethrum Cassava Fishing / Fish Products Construction Spices Tea Music / Entertainment Furniture Cotton Coffee Handicraft Forestry Paddy Potatoes Tobacco Precious Stones/Metals Sugar Sorghum Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program Gems & Jewelry 7 Clusters & Value Chain Assessment – the Process • Staple Crops • Horticulture / Food Processing • Coffee • Cotton • Tea • Oilseeds • Livestock: Meat, Dairy • Spices • Cashew Nuts • Engineering/Machinery • Tourism • Transport/Logistics • Footwear • Textiles and Apparel • Furniture • Construction Materials • Chemicals/Pharmaceuticals SCALE • Fishing / Fish Products OF • Wood Products IMPACT • Gems & Jewelry Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program • • • • • • • • COMPETITIVE GROWTH POTENTIAL Horticulture Food Processing Tourism Tea Livestock – Beef, Dairy Fishing Textiles and Apparel Transport/Logistics LEADERSHIP 8 Cluster & VC Assessment Data Gathering – 8 Clusters Interviews with over 250 stakeholders nationwide over an 8 week period Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program 9 Cluster & Value Chain Assessment For the selected 8 clusters we looked at: • • • • • • Industry Structure Value Chain Productivity Access to Markets General Business Environment Constraints (not addressed in Business Environment) Opportunities to Improve Competitiveness Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program 10 Additional considerations in selecting three clusters • Presence of other donors – resources committed • Donor fatigue • Types of recent donor activity – narrowly focused by subsector (fruit processing), product (bottled juices) or function (new production technology) – or… overarching and looking at the interaction between entire industry value chains and extended clusters -- and how to improve them The three selected clusters are not over-resourced and little if any strategic and overarching work has been done in them Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program 11 Component 2 – Identify Three Target Clusters (from Eight) Based on the Cluster & VC Assessment – selected: • Horticulture – important in TZ economy (>300,000 employ), good leadership & assoc to work with, positive growth trends, possible interventions in productivity, quality stds, marketing/dist • Tourism – 30% of exports & 10% of economy, some of best assets in Africa, strong leadership & assocs, possible interventions in branding, promotion, customer service, quality stds • Food Processing – excellent cross cutting for horticulture, fishing, meat, dairy, important for food security, critical for export growth, interventions in quality stds, packaging, mktg/dist Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program 12 Key Constraints in the Horticulture Value Chain Business environment blocking new investments in the industry Certification and standards for export difficult to meet Poor irrigation and land management Limited access to skilled labor and technology Limited finance for farmers Inputs Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program Handling issues damage products in transit Farmers No cold storage at key points, e.g airport Exporters 13 Horticulture: Emerging Priority Interventions • National Horticulture Strategy • Strengthen and expand cold chain • Establish more laboratory facilities • Support farm-level capacities through extension services, model farms • Establish pack houses close to major farms and at export points with cold facilities • Access to finance at farm level matched with technical support • ID which products into which markets are best for competitive growth – matched with technical support • Business planning and management capacity building for farmers and processors Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program • Water management techniques training for farmers • Strengthen link with food processors and high value customers in Tanzania • Develop horticulture statistics – map Tanzania’s regions and capacities • Capacity-building with farmers negotiating and contracting • Build capacity with associations – lobbying and information provision • Establish National Code of Conduct for Horticulture/Benchmark of International Standards • Adopt better technology and standards for processors • Improve government support capacity to smallholder farmers 14 Cluster Linkages Food Processing Horticulture Demand creation Supply chain mngt Standards and Certifications Tourism and Hospitality Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program 15 CCP Activity Examples • • Product Enhancements Regulatory Improvements • Improved Marketing • Value chain Improvements • Product Differentiation • Branding Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program • Adopt new quality standards • Association capacity devlpmnt to deliver advocacy platforms • Industry experts for promo / packaging / labeling & export dev • Link new customers & suppliers, co-fund infrastructure • Industry experts for trends in new product /svc lines & upgrades • Branding theme development, cofund int’l cluster promotion 16 Agenda • Cluster Competitiveness Project Overview • Competitiveness Concepts and Principles • Components of Strategic Thinking • Export Benchmarking and Market Trends Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program 17 Sectors, Clusters & Value Chains Definitions: • Sectors: a broad description of an industry group such as tourism, textiles or horticulture. Sectors typically include within them: – Clusters: a group of companies and institutions working in a common industry sector, often benefiting from being located in the same geographic region – Value Chains: the full range of companies/activities required to bring a specific product or service to market, from sourcing raw materials to production, processing, sales and finally distribution Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program 18 Value Chain Example: Pakistan Dairy Cold Chain Processors Value Added Products* Farmer Minimum Pasteurization Gawala Delivery Unpacked Milk Middle Man * Processed milk, Ice Cream, Cheese, Yogurt/Yogurt drinks etc. Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program 19 Cluster Example: California Wine Grapestock Barrels State Government Agencies (e.g., Select Committee on Wine Production and Economy) Fertilizer, Pesticides, Herbicides Winemaking Equipment Bottles Caps and Corks Grape Harvesting Equipment Labels Irrigation Technology Growers/Vineyards Wineries/Processing Facilities Public Relations and Advertising Specialized Publications (e.g., Wine Spectator, Trade Journal) California Agricultural Cluster Tourism Cluster Educational, Research, & Trade Organizations (e.g. Wine Institute, UC Davis, Culinary Institutes) Sources: California Wine Institute, Internet search, California State Legislature. Based on research by Michael E Porter and MBA 1997 students R. Alexander, R. Arney, N. Black, E. Frost, and A. Shivananda. Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program Food Cluster 20 What is competitiveness? Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program 21 Competitiveness is NOT just … • Abundant Natural Resources • Cheap Labor • Cheap Currency • Great Location • Better Government “Incentives” Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program 22 Competitiveness is … • Better products and services (unique and higher quality) that command higher prices on the market • Investment in skilled labor force leading to higher wages • Higher productivity inputs at a lower cost • Better market information • Expanded access to markets • Continuously improving business performance Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program 23 Firm: Good Strategy and Good Operations Good Productivity Frontier Competitive Winners Strategic Productivity Companies Falling Behind Poor Poor Source: Monitor Co. Operational Productivity Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program Good 24 Strategic and Operational Productivity Operational Productivity Strategic Productivity • Lower costs • New and better products • Increased quality • • More efficient technology Supporting services that adds value • Improved management processes • Forward integrating • Target markets • Faster route-to-market Run the same race faster Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program Choose to run a different race 25 Characteristics of Competitive Industries • Customer focused – do research to understand needs • Forward integrated – control more processing & distrib • Innovative – regularly upgrade/offer new products & services • Obsessed with Quality – better inputs, production & management processes • Cooperative – with others related to their industry • Market savvy – understand their competitive position • Collaborative – work with government to solve problems • Flexible – Use new strategies to reposition themselves Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program 26 A New Model for Competing… Strategically positioning the Tanzanian horticulture requires: – In-depth understanding of the market and specific segments – Efficient management from ALL providers of products/services – Input and collaboration from all key inputs into horticulture value chain, not just the exporters In today’s global economy, companies do not compete against other companies; value chains compete against value chains. Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program 27 Marketing Channels, Past P R O D U C E R S E X P O R T E R S B R O K E R S Source: Grahame Dixie Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program I M P O R T E R S P R O C E S S O R S W H O L S A L E R S R E T A I L E R S C O N S U M E R S Marketing Channels, Now/Future P R O D U C E R S Source: Grahame Dixie Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program C O N S U M E R S Marketing Channels, Past and Present 1970s – 1980s • Multiple business links in the marketing chain (up to 6), creating high transaction costs Now • Much fewer links/businesses in the marketing chain (2-4) • Fewer, larger, more professional businesses, including export farms • Multiple small-scale sales/deals • Numerous small specialist companies • More added-value/processing in exporting countries • Relatively low volumes of trade • • Relatively high commodity prices Greater volume of trade, lower prices & transaction costs • Power with the bigger companies in importing, processing, wholesaling • Backward & forward vertical integration • Huge retail chains dominate the marketing chain & hold most of the profit Source: Adapted from Grahame Dixie Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program Building Competitiveness in Export Markets Penetrating and competing on world markets requires firms to understand the market demand and supplying products with unique value to the market Supplying valuable products and services Sophisticated World Markets Floor WTO, HACCP, EUREGAP, “ISO”, other Market Standards Ceiling Repositioning Industries for Emerging Opportunities Understanding the market demand (Global and Regional) Low Cost, Low Value Trap Obtaining international standards is only the beginning of achieving competitiveness on international markets Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program Agenda • Cluster Competitiveness Project Overview • Competitiveness Concepts and Principles • Components of Strategic Thinking • Export Benchmarking and Market Trends Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program 32 Becoming Competitive Building a Strategy for Horticulture Growth Markets and Trends in Horticulture? What to offer, where and who to serve? What do we need? Which markets? Target markets? Investment What trends? Which customers? Access to Markets Which competitors? What products, now and future? Coordination Skills and capabilities Policy / regulations Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program At what price? 33 Strategy A Strategy is… • • • • • A unique, valuable product versus competitors A Strategy is NOT just… • Aspirations and Vision • Value chain productivity A different, customized position on the market • A marketing campaign • Investment incentives Clear, informed trade-offs, choosing what NOT to do • Best practice improvement • Agility and Flexibility • Innovation • The internet or any technology • Integration • Alliances and partnering Activities that fit together and reinforce each other Continuity of position with continual and consistent progress Source: Adapted from Michael Porter, 2004 Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program 34 Principles for Strategy Development • Market-oriented • Private-sector driven • Representative of all actors • Informed by the latest data and information • Ambitious, but honest and transparent • Actionable and accountable Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program 35 Developing a Strategy Assessing the Potential Prioritizing the Development Mobilizing the Resources Market Opportunities Economic Value Leadership Production Possibilities Social Impact Investment Geographic Locations Environmental Sustainability Building Capacity Time, phasing and feasibility Collective Will & Action Expand Horticulture Networks Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program 36 Components of a Strategic Agenda Productivity Market and Product Enhancements Development Infrastructure and Logistics Financing Industry Standards Workforce Development Industry Organization and Supporting Institutions Regulatory Reforms Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program 37 Agenda • Cluster Competitiveness Project Overview • Competitiveness Concepts and Principles • Components of Strategic Thinking • Export Benchmarking and Market Trends Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program 38 Horticulture Exports Exports of live trees, plants, cut flowers etc USD $ 000s 700,000 584,684 600,000 Kenya 500,000 442,149 400,000 300,000 South Africa Ethiopia 358,939 273,336 Thailand 283,898 Chile Tanzania 200,000 100,000 Ghana TZ= 14,302 TZ= 15,759 TZ= 11,422 TZ= 48,628 TZ= 24,638 - 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 While exports of trees, plants, and flowers have increased in Tanzania over the past few years, other countries (including Kenya and Ethiopia) have shown consistent steady growth since 2004. Source: TradeMap, 2009 Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program Horticulture Exports USD $ 000s 60,000 TZ Exports of live trees, plants, cut flowers 48,628 50,000 40,000 30,000 24,638 20,000 14,302 15,759 11,422 10,000 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 Tanzania’s exports of trees and cut flowers doubled in 2007 and in 2008. Source: TradeMap, 2009 Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program Horticulture Exports USD $ 000s Exports of Vegetables, 000s $ 300,000 250,000 225,908 Thailand 198,069 200,000 Kenya Ethiopia 150,136 150,000 100,000 50,000 Chile KY 65,787 Tanzania 99,617 South Africa 78,554 TZ= 18,965 TZ= 36,115 TZ= 23,571 Ghana 54,642 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 An examination of vegetable exports tells a similar story. The primary exporters of vegetables (such as Kenya and Ethiopia, as well as Thailand), have shown steady growth since 2004. However, Tanzania has narrowed the gap over the past two years, surpassing South Africa. Source: TradeMap, 2009 Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program Horticulture Exports USD $ 000s TZ Exports of Vegetables 90,000 78,554 80,000 70,000 60,000 54,642 50,000 40,000 36,115 30,000 20,000 23,571 18,965 10,000 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 Tanzania’s vegetable exports have more than tripled in the past two years. Source: TradeMap, 2009 Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program Horticulture Exports USD $ 000s Exports of Fruits, citrus fruit, melons 5,000,000 4,518,652 4,500,000 4,000,000 Chile 3,500,000 South Africa 3,000,000 2,500,000 2,000,000 Thailand 2,470,956 Kenya 2,166,708 1,737,152 1,864,348 Ghana Ethiopia 1,500,000 Tanzania 1,000,000 TZ= 838 500,000 2004 TZ= 797 2005 TZ= 769 2006 TZ= 679 TZ= 832 2007 2008 Chile dominates comparator countries in fruit exports. It is interesting to note that Chile doubled exports from 2007 to 2008; while exports from African countries were flat. This may be attributable to the free trade agreement Chile signed with the US. Source: TradeMap, 2009 Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program Horticulture Exports Exports of Fruits, citrus fruit, melons USD $ 000s 1,541,138 1,600,000 1,437,728 1,400,000 1,200,000 1,147,927 1,181,877 1,114,719 South Africa 1,000,000 Thailand 800,000 Kenya 600,000 Tanzania 400,000 200,000 KY= 17,057 KY= 17,530 TZ=838 KY= 21,253 TZ=797 KY= 21,297 TZ=769 KY= 26,626 TZ=832 TZ=679 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 A closer examination shows that Tanzania’s fruit exports have declined slightly since 2004 from a fairly low base. Ghana has shown a steep decline in the same period of time and has been replaced by Kenya as the regional leader. Source: TradeMap, 2009 Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program Horticulture Exports USD $ 000s Exports of Spices 45,000 38,712 40,000 35,700 35,000 Thailand 30,000 Chile 25,000 South Africa 20,000 18,037 17,151 14,912 16,058 Tanzania Ethiopia 9,580 15,000 Kenya 9,272 10,806 8,906 6,843 10,000 8,802 6,615 3,919 5,000 1,990 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 Tanzanian spice exports jumped from 2007 to 2008 after several years of flat growth and rivals South Africa for the regional lead. Source: TradeMap, 2009 Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program Key Market Trends in Horticulture: Consumer Side • Increased demand for fresh produce, especially as an alternative to processed fruits and vegetables; largely driven by health concerns • Food safety being given increased attention; has ramifications for certification and traceability (origin ie halal, vegetarian, or non-GMO) and certified production processes (HACCP, GAP) • Convenience at a premium, but must be balanced with health concerns; may have an impact on fruits, increasing demand for ready-to-eat (apples, pears, and bananas) vs. citrus fruits, which must be peeled Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program Key Market Trends in Horticulture: Consumer Side • Increased consumer power includes demand to know where a product comes from, how it was grown, and health/nutritional properties • Growing urbanization in South Asia leading to lower grain consumption and more consumption of fruits/ vegetables • Due to high levels of vegetarianism (64% of South Asian are Hindu and do not eat meat) consumers turning to fruits and vegetables more than toward meat • Consumers care more about environmental sustainability in purchase decisions; may have impact on exports as consumers turn toward locally grown food, but organic foods to benefit Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program Key Market Trends in Horticulture: Organic • Production arrangements/contracts between producers & restaurants • Retail chains (in the West) dedicated exclusively to organics • Food service industry increasingly offering organic alternatives • Major grocery retailers increasing space for organic products • Large conventional food processors developing organic versions of name-brand products • Organic selection of fresh and ready products (ie bagged salads) • Organic consumer demographics diversifying; no longer being defined by one single ethnic group or segment of the population • Retailers/processors sourcing organic product outside North America Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program Key Trends in Horticulture: Retail Side • Streamlined supply chains, with decline in share of wholesalers relative to retailers • Wholesalers increasingly being bypassed in response to a growing demand for specialized and value-added products • Increase in the variety of produce and the number of branded products offered at retail • Increase in the sales of fresh-cut fruit, despite higher price point (which remains an obstacle for some); for example, fresh-cut produce sales in the US increased from $8.9 billion to $15.5 billion between 2003 and 2007 Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program Key Trends in Horticulture: Retail Side • Closer relationships developing between producers/suppliers and the retail buyer than ever before; producers and suppliers playing an active role in improving category profitability, not just providing product • Producers and suppliers providing services such as returnable cartons, automatic inventory replenishment programs • Producers/suppliers joining to increase market presence • Emergence of large distributors serving retail grocery and food service segments Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program Key Trends in Horticulture: Retail Side • Increasing importance of food away from home sector (such as restaurants and hotels), which is a growth market because people still want healthy meals even though they are eating out • More shippers are marketing directly to the consumer (ie via websites) • Key trends in packing include semi-prepared fruits and vegetables, quantity standardization, and pre-packs • Arguably the most important standard for African exporters of fruits and vegetables is EurepGAP because of the importance of Europe as a market Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program Figure 1. Example Horticulture Products in Tanzania Vegetables • Green Beans • Chili Peppers • Asparagus • Baby Corn • Snap Peas • Broccoli • Baby Carrots • Tomatoes • Onions • Snow Peas • Cabbages • Green Peas • Nightshade • Peppers • Okra • Amaranth • Pumpkin • Cassava Leaves Cut Flowers and Ornamental Plants • Roses • Chrysanthemum • Cuttings • Other ornamentals Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program Fruits • Apples • Berries • Jack Fruit • Mangoes • Oranges • Papaya • Pawpaw • Passion Fruit • Pears • Pineapple • Plums Spices, Herbs and Nuts • Cardamom • Cinnamon • Clove • Nutmeg • Vanilla • Herbal Medicines • Macademia Nuts Horticulture crops can be transformed in many ways… Fresh Processed Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program Packed … and marketed profitably in various markets Regional Export Local Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program Figure 5. Growth Strategy for Horticulture Mobilize Human Resources Promote Horticulture in Tanzania Strengthen Industry Linkages Expand Long-term Financing & Investment Expand Production Base & Improve Quality Address Land, Policy & Infrastructure Bottlenecks Support Market Development Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Horticulture Competitiveness Agenda 20.0% 18.0% 86,716,351 16.0% 137,193,413 14.0% 97,540,611 12.0% 153,358,067 118,008,935 107,153,790 10.0% 8.0% 74,290,203 6.0% 69,092,226 4.0% 2.0% 0.0% 1998 2000 2002 Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program 2004 2006 2008 2010 Tanzania Horticulture Competitiveness Agenda 2001 $ USD 69 billion Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program 2008 $ USD 153 billion Tanzania Horticulture Competitiveness Agenda Farm Production Pressure Points Risk to Farmer Access to Land + Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program Irrigation + Financing Cluster Linkages Figure 7. Expanding Production and Improving Quality Access to Land Good Agriculture Practices Irrigation & Fertilizer Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program Financing 59 Volume Agricultural Chemicals in Tanzania 25 21 20 15 Demand Availability 10 6 4 5 2.1 Solid Formulation (tons) Liquid Formulation (million litres) Source: Salum Shamte, Kilimo Kwanza Key Elements, TNBC, 2010 Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program 60 Farmer Field Schools Market Service Centers Export Market Linkages Model Farms Pack Houses Testing Laboratories Land Access Market Intelligence Water Access Finance Access Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program Good Agric Practice Cold Chain Quality Control Reaching Scale Market Intel Route – to – Market Figure 9. Transforming the Horticulture Value Chain Model Farms Certified Nurseries / Fertilizers Pack Houses Farmer Field Schools Expanded finance for farmers Inputs On-farm Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program Farmer Market Centers Packing / Transport Cold storage at key distribution points, (e.g airport) Market 62 Assets Central plateau (Morogoro/Dodoma) • Suitable for tropical fruit (passion fruit, mangos) as well as flowers • Advanced plans by consortium of 16 Dutch flower farmers to set up farms Mbeya • Citrus fruit and tropical fruit • Association of mango farmers exporting to Asia Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program Source: map from http://eusoils.jrc.it/esdb_archive/EuDASM/africa/maps/afr_tz2001_to.htm Northern highlands (Arusha/Kilimanjaro) • Ideal for full range of European flowers, cuttings, vegetables, fruits and seeds • More then 30 flower and vegetable farms already exporting to Europe Coast Zone (Tanga/Pwani) • Citrus fruit and tropical fruit • Dutch group developing passion fruit frozen concentrate operation Southern highlands (Iringa) • Ideal for full range of European flowers, cuttings, vegetables, fruits and seeds • Traditional fruit growing area • Largely undeveloped; export potential with opening of new airport Assets Mwanza Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program Source: map from http://eusoils.jrc.it/esdb_archive/EuDASM/africa/maps/afr_tz2001_to.htm Geographic Concentration of Manufacturing Industries Furniture, others Machinery & Electric Metal & Allied Building Materials Chem, Plstc, Rubber Paper & Publishing Timber & Wood Leather & Footwear Textile & Garments Food, Bev, & Tob Dar es Salaam 22 Scale = 1 firm = 10 firms = 20 firms Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program 65 Figure 4. Tanzania Horticulture Export Potential USD $ Millions 1,850 2,000 1,500 1,000 500 150 185 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 Note: 2010 figure based on 2008 exports figures from UNComtrade with modest annual growth assumption of 10% in 2010. Growth projections from 2010 to 2020 based on an average annual growth rate of 25% Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program 66 Figure 2. Tanzania Horticulture Export Performance USD $ Millions 160 140 120 100 80 60 40 20 - 146 89 62 45 2004 45 2005 2006 2007 2008 Source: UNComtrade Data, 2010 Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program 67 Horticultural Exports, USD$ millions 2,000 1,800 1,600 1,400 South Africa 1,200 Kenya 1,000 846 (KY) 800 400 Tanzania 668 (KY) 600 537 (KY) 358 (KY) 200 45 (TZ) Ethiopia Ghana 405 (KY) 62 (TZ) 45 (TZ) 89 (TZ) 146 (TZ) 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 Source: UN Comtrade Data, CCP Analysis, based on horticulture segments outlined above Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program 68 USD $ m illion Ethiopia Horticulture Exports 400 348 350 300 250 203 200 150 100 104 46 66 50 2004 Cluster Competitiveness Program Tanzania Cluster Competitiveness Program 2005 2006 2007 2008 69