Market

Market
Showing posts with label MFPI. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MFPI. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 21, 2012

BUSINESS INCUBATORS-NEED OF THE HOUR FOR FOOD ENTREPRENEURS

A major advantage for big food processing companies is their deep pocket and their ability to innovate using in-house R&D facilities and experienced food professionals. In sharp contrast a small entrepreneur with limited cash in hand faces a huge risk in setting up a venture even under best of the conditions. In a country like India bank financing may be some what easy provided banks are convinced that one has a viable project with low risk. But most entrepreneurs find it difficult to get either the appropriate technology or some minimum hands-on experience for ensuring success after establishing the venture. Here is where the concept of an Incubation Center becomes relevant for the growth of food processing industry. In many countries of the West there are specialized incubation centers catering to diverse interests and food processing incubation centers are also working successfully escorting the entrepreneur till the venture starts production in its own facilities. For an incubation center to be successful there are several pre-requisites which include state of the art equipment and supporting facilities, a good knowledge about food processing, experienced food experts with networking background, closeness to a major food industry cluster and above all a commitment to stand by the entrepreneur till success is achieved. Here is a critique on the importance of incubators in the development of industry.

At many specialty incubators, the goal is more about economic bootstrapping than building the next technology blockbuster. Encouraging entrepreneurship among the poor is a common theme. For instance, La Cocina, a culinary incubator in San Francisco, helps immigrant women with low incomes get food businesses off the ground. First-time entrepreneurs need plenty of guidance with the intricacies of opening restaurants and packaged food businesses. Azalea Perez Olivares, events coordinator and spokeswoman for the food nonprofit, said that the reality check comes during regular informational orientations held before anyone can submit their applications. The message is deliberately sobering. "We try to be realistic—that the majority of food businesses fail," she says. Staff and food industry volunteers mentor those who are selected for the program. Participants almost invariably have to rewrite business plans after better researching the competition and learning about the financing needed to turn their idea into a business. After getting the basics in order, the would-be food entrepreneurs can use the incubator's shared kitchen, which has eight work stations over 4,400 square feet. Food-safety regulations require all food businesses to use a professional kitchen, rather than cook at home. The women who go through the program come out with contacts in the food industry that they would probably never otherwise have been able to get. Additionally, buyers from Whole Foods (WFM), the specialty grocery chain, visit to take a look at the food coming out of the program. So far, 13 businesses have graduated, including a pickle maker and a baker of Irish shortbread that's covered in chocolate. A handful have opened restaurants, such as a graduate who originally sold his Japanese rice balls from a cart.

Who can set up incubation centers and are they viable as a stand alone activity bringing reasonable returns on investment are questions for which there are no clear answers under Indian conditions. Will the large industry cooperate with such incubators for providing hands-on experience for new entrepreneurs wanting to take advantage of the facilities? Are the research institutions in public funded universities and under CSIR, ICAR and others are "fit enough" to undertake the challenges? It may be recalled that way back in early 1990s Ministry of Food Processing Industry (MFPI) provided a grant of Rs 5 crore to Central Food Technological Research Institute at Mysore for setting up a Food Engineering Center which could be eventually converted into an incubator but till to date no one knows the fate of this "Center"! If GOI is serious about development of food industry in the country, it has to create a SPV for setting up such incubators in all the states, preferably in areas where knowledge about food and food processing corridors exist side by side. Institutions like CFTRI, DFRL, NIFTEM, Universities where training facilities exist and others involved in food related developmental work, must join hands and pool their resources to set up a number of food business incubators for creating a new generation of small time entrepreneurs that will boost the role of food industry in the national economy..  

V.H.POTTY
http://vhpotty.blogspot.com/
http://foodtechupdates.blogspot.com

Sunday, February 20, 2011

HERE COMES ANOTHER "GEM" FROM MFPI-ANY ONE LISTENING?

Read the "exhortation" from the Food Czar at Delhi (Bureaucrat) about what should be done to promote Goan foods in the country! If there is an award for talking through the air, it must go to this person because all the things he said about promoting food industry in Goa have been heard before and nothing much has happened any where. According to this preacher, presiding over the bureaucratic section of the MFPI at Delhi, Goa should have its own food "research" laboratory and one wonders whether he has any clue regarding the logistics involved in setting up a brand new research set up. Probably he must be thinking that providing money would automatically lead to creation of new technical institutions. This is when the conditions in most food technology institutions are pathetic with practically nothing worth while emerging from them that is useful to the industry. If this is so, building another institute is nothing but fool hardy.

"Ashok Sinha, secretary, union ministry of food processing industries, announced at the national food seminar "Goa FoodPro" held in Panaji on January 30 that Goa can set up 1,000 food carts around Panaji under the Central scheme which will generate employment in the state. The seminar was organised by the Goa Chamber of Commerce and Industry (GCCI). "Goa should stake a claim to the Centre's food street scheme. We can cover at least one street with basic infrastructure for it to be a food street. One thousand carts can come up in Goa, in and around Panaji, providing street food. It will help in employment generation in the state, which I am told is an issue," Sinha said. He also suggested to chief minister Digambar Kamat that the state should get at least one food technology laboratory to package Goa's ethnic food to be marketed in all major tourist destinations in the country. "At least one food technology laboratory should come up in Goa. A high-level committee for food processing has already been set up in Goa and I know that an institute of food processing is an integral part of the committee's plans," Sinha said. Sinha also said food items unique to Goa should be made available across shelves in the country with better packaging and marketing. "Each state should have a shelf of Goan food like bebinca. No product can sell by itself. There has to be packaging to add value," he said.

Interestingly this gentleman wants the new research set up to carry out work on "packing" of Goan foods with out realizing the complexity of the job. There is already an institute under CSIR, another under DRDO and two others under the MFPI itself from where must seek answers as to what research is being conducted by them on hundreds of traditional foods of India and demand accountability for the vast funds invested in them by the government. Creating more institutions is not the answer but putting the already existing infrastructure facilities and precious personnel pool available here to better use must be the mission of MFPI. The traditional foods have been neglected by food scientists in this country for too long and it is within the power of the GOI to give clear direction to these institutions to focus on Indian foods popular in different states to come out with commercial technologies for their preservation and marketing within India and abroad. What ever items of traditional food that are available in stabilized format in the market owes their existence not because of these redundant research out fits but in spite of them!
V.H.POTTY
http://vhpotty.blogspot.com/
http://foodtechupdates.blogspot.com

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

"SAFE FOOD" TOWNS-ANOTHER ILL-CONCEIVED "SCHEME"?

Government agencies have a knack in recycling old schemes as new from time to time and here is an example of such approach which was announced by the minister for food processing recently in Rajya Sabha! Street vending of foods is a phenomenon that is common in many developing countries and there is hardly a place in India where street vending is not visible. As early as 2 decades ago efforts were made to make foods offered by the street vendors safe through training and improved infrastructure that would improve the hygiene and sanitation significantly. How ever these efforts were far and few in some places with no national foot print. Unhygienic foods continue to be served and gullible public continue to patronize these road side vending outlets with no sense of fear or reservation. Repeated pleas to create specialized food courts in all towns, especially in tourist places, for small scale food vendors have fallen on deaf ears and the present announcement about "safe food towns" or upgrading street foods will have to be taken with a pinch of salt. The grand declaration does not carry conviction because there is no raod map for achieving the desired result.

"Minister of Food Processing Industries Subodh Kant Sahai has said that his Ministry has mooted a scheme for "Upgradation of Quality of Street Food" for implementation of the 11th Plan period. Replying to a question in the Rajya Sabha recently, he said the scheme is yet to be approved by the Ministry of Finance for implementation on a pilot basis in 11 cities in the Safe Food Town component and 6 cities in the Food-Street Component. He said the outcome of these pilot projects would help the Ministry in implementation of the scheme more effectively in the 12th Five Year Plan (2012-17). Mr Sahai said initial preparatory work had been initiated in 2008-09 for "Safe Food Town" component of the Scheme in 11 cities - Ranchi, Nagpur, Kochi, Ludhiana, Jaipur, Agra, Guwahati, Agartala, Shillong, Panaji and Surat and for "Food-Street" component in Tirupati, Hyderabad, Amritsar, Varanasi, Udaipur and Guwahati".

It was only recently that Chandigarh had the mortification to see its food court, first in the country, becoming a center for undesirable activities, especially during late hours because of gross negligence and mismanagement. The concept of a food court with good common facilities and impeccable hygienic environment is considered excellent because such facilities can ensure use of safe water and supporting facilities for the customers. Those who take up street vending go for it because of limited invest capability for setting up their own facilities in prime areas where crowds congregate and food courts located strategically can rehabilitate these less fortunate entrepreneurs.


V.H.POTTY
http://vhpotty.blogspot.com/
http://foodtechupdates.blogspot.com



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in the Yahoo! Answers Food & Drink Q&A.

Saturday, August 7, 2010

INDIAN CONSUMER-WAITING FOR THE "ELUSIVE" FOOD SAFETY REGIME


When the Ministry of Food Processing Industry in India, was promoted as a show-piece of Rajiv Gandhi's Cabinet, it was expected to streamline and accelerate the development of this much neglected sector, considered as a sure route for value addition and much needed employment generation. One of the priority objectives was to "integrate" the food monitoring functions vested with more than a dozen government departments. That it took more than 20 years to achieve any perceptible movement on this score speaks volume about the seriousness of the administrators in bringing about changes that benefit the people. Even now the "new born" FSSAI created to fulfill the same objective is only talking about its "plans" and one can only hope that frequent statements from top to bottom officials of this organization will translate into some thing concrete that can be felt by the people of the country. It is being forgotten that the sufferers were the poor farmers and hapless citizens of the country.


"India will soon enforce a tough law to maintain standards and quality of food and water as 80 percent of all deaths in the country are believed to be linked to unhealthy food and water, an official said here Tuesday. "Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006, which consolidates various acts and orders that have hitherto handled food related issues in various union ministries and departments, would be enforced soon," Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) Deputy Director M.S. Karak said while addressing an awareness programme on food safety and quality. Quoting the Public Health Foundation of India, he said: "It was estimated that 80 percent of all premature deaths are attributed to unhealthy food and water." "After enforcement of the new act, eight regulations currently in operation will be automatically repealed," he said. Karak said that various central acts like the Prevention of Food Adulteration Act, 1954, the Fruit Products Order, 1955, the Meat Food Products Order, 1973, the Vegetable Oil Products (Control) Order, 1947, the Edible Oils Packaging (Regulation) Order, 1998 and the Milk and Milk Product Order, 1992 will be repealed after the enforcement of the FSS Act, 2006. According to Karak, necessary rules and regulations of the new law are being formulated before its enforcement. The law will govern the entire food business and food-related issues in India".


It is beyond one's comprehension as to how a junior official of GOI can assert that 80% of all deaths in the country are "believed" to be due to unhealthy food and water! Who is responsible for this sad state of affairs? Probably he is forgetting that he is blaming other wings of the government, of which he is also integral part, supposed to be responsible for preventing such deaths and that his organization is working hard to address that problem! If there is a major country in the world that does not have a clue regarding cause of death of its citizens ( probably does not care) and lack reliable data, it is India. If FSSAI is convinced that food is the major cause of death in the country how is it possible for them to prevent them by consolidating the "acts and orders"? Do they consider that they have the "magic bullet" to solve the problem? Every Indian citizen knows how ineffective food safety enforcement system in India has been and no amount of "talk" by any "Authority" is going to be convincing unless visible results are discernible at the ground level.

V.H.POTTY
http://vhpotty.blogspot.com/
http://foodtechupdates.blogspot.com

Thursday, November 26, 2009

INTERACTIVE WEB SITE ON FOOD FOR CONSUMER EDUCATION


An enlightened consumer ( not misinformed) can be an asset to the food industry as it will save them from unsubstantiated insinuations by vested interests and any mechanism that can educate the consumer regarding the multi dimensional nature of food is bound to be helpful. This is currently being done by some NGOs, many of them, being marginally better in terms of real time information about many aspects of food. In an age where consumer is continuously being bombarded with saturation promotional commercials on the small screen, many of them utterly non-nonsensical and unscientific, there is a necessity to present the real picture through a mechanism with wide access. Launch of an authentic web site dedicated to bringing out facts and figures about the food that is consumed every day is a welcome development

"Did you know that one in four Americans report a foodborne illness annually? How about the fact that nearly 200 food recalls are made in the U.S. each year? These are a few of the food safety facts from the newly designed "Got to be N.C. Food Safety" Web site at www.ncfoodsafety.com, that is one of three new ways to get information on food safety, laws and news. The Food and Drug Protection Division of the N.C. Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services also has a toll-free number and e-mail address to provide consumers, retailers, producers and educators with answers to their food safety questions".

Probably the FSSAI, the food safety arm of GOI must address this issue and MFPI can consider starting a dedicated TV channel for this purpose. If such a channel, especially an interactive one, is put in place, consumers will have an authentic source of information on different aspects of food. While launching such a channel, industry cooperation can be sought to present the intricate details of food processing in their facilities.
V.H.POTTY
http://vhpotty.blogspot.com/
http://foodtechupdates.blogspot.com