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Cold Chain
Logistics
Sector Analysis Nov-Dec, 2011

                       Rishab Sapra & Shridhar Joshi
Cold Chain Logistics
             Sector Analysis by
                Rishab Sapra
          rishabsapra@gmail.com
               Shridhar Joshi
          joshridhar@gmail.com

           Business Design, 2011-2013
Welingkar Institute of Management and Research
•   What is Logistics ?
•   Introduction to Cold Chain Logistics
•   History and Breakthroughs
•   Global Scenario
•   Indian Ice Age
•   Value Parameters
•   Users
What is Logistics ?
Logistics is the management
of the flow of goods from                    Transportation

origin to destination to
meet customer requirements
                              Security                               Inventory



Right Time, Right Place
@ Minimum Cost                            Logistics
                              Packaging                            Warehousing

Started as a business
concept in 1950’s                             Information
                                              Management




                                          Source: Global Agri System Pvt. Ltd. Report
What is Cold Chain Logistics?
                                                TEMPERATURE
                                                                              COLD CHAIN
                  LOGISTICS                        CONTROL
                                                                               LOGISTICS
                                               (REFRIGERATION)



Major Sectors : Food and Beverages, Bio-Pharmaceutical

The Cold chain logistics infrastructure
         Supply
                              Transport               Storage            Transport            End Customer
      Procurement

• Precooling System   • Refrigerated         • Cold Storage      • Refrigerated         • Retail, Terminal,
• Farms (Rural          Trucks               • Warehouses          Trucks                 Markets, Factory,
  Markets)            • Refrigerated                             • Refrigerated           Ports, Airport
• Manufacturers         Railway Wagons                             Railway Wagons
                      • Refrigerated Cargo                       • Refrigerated Cargo
                        Containers                                 Containers
Global Cold Chain Facts: Food Sector



        Fruits &       Meat      Fish & Seafood Dairy Products   Beverages
       Vegetables

In European and American developed countries, the rate of
refrigerated transport is up to 80-90%,
pre-cooling preservation is up to 80-100%,
and the loss rate is below 5%.

25% of the total food production is processed foods. A booming industry
Cold chain in Food Sector




Industry Temperature Standards
Banana        Chill       Frozen   Deep Frozen
13 C          2C          -18 C    -29 C
Temperature   Product
                                     Refrigerated Shelf Life Optimum
                                     (Days)                  Temperature (Celcius)


and           Apple

              Bananas
                                     90-240

                                     7-28
                                                            0

                                                            13.5


Shelf Life    Bell Peppers

              Cabbage
                                     21-35

                                     14-20
                                                            7

                                                            1

              Eggs                   180                    1.1

              Onions                 30-180                 1

              Lettuce                12-14                  0.6

              Fresh Meat (beef,
                                     14-65                  -2
              lamb, pork, poultry)

              Oranges                21-90                  7

              Pears                  120-180                -0.6

              Potatoes               30-50                  10
              Seafood (shrimp,
                                     120-360                -17.8
              lobster, crab)
              Strawberries           5-10                   0.6

              Tomatoes               7-14                   12
Global Cold Chain Facts: Bio-Pharmaceutical



    Pharmaceutical    Biotech      Vaccines    Blood Products      Clinical Trials

Global Bio-Pharma Cold-chain market
2010 : $5.1 billion     2011 : $6.6 billion
2014 : 7 of the top 10 global pharma products in will require cold-chain handling
Vaccines growing on average 8% per year for the next five years
                                                    Source: www.fiercebiotech.com/press-releases/




                                                               source: www.coldchainpharm.com/
Cold chain in Pharmaceutical Sector
Global Cold Chain- Pharmaceutical Sector
Bio-pharma logistics spending growth



                                                   Cold chain logistics spending
                                                   expanded from $5.1 billion in 2008
                                                   to $6.6 billion in 2011




Cold chain shipment growth by region




                             Sources: http://www.aircargoinsights.com/news/cold-chain-pharmaceuticals-worth-billions/
                             http://www.aircargoinsights.com/more-market/global-biopharma-demand-on-the-rise/
HISTORY & BREAKTHROUGHS
      1797 British fishermen used natural ice to preserve their fish stock piles

Late 1820’s Movement of food from rural areas to urban consumption markets

    1851s Mechanical refrigeration and Air-conditioning plant patented by Dr. John
          Gorrie

     1867 The refrigerated railroad car was patented by J.B. Sutherland of Detroit

    1870s Trade of food between colonial powers and their colonies
          France received mutton carcasses from South America
          Great Britain imported frozen beef from Australia, pork from New Zealand
     1882 SS Dunedin, the first ship to complete transportation of frozen meat.
     1910 600,000 tons of frozen meat was being brought into Great Britain alone.
    1920’s Group of CFC’s - Freon used in refrigeration was developed.

                  Source: http://people.hofstra.edu/geotrans/eng/ch5en/appl5en/ch5a5en.html
HISTORY & BREAKTHROUGHS
1857  The first shipment of refrigerated beef was made from the Chicago stockyards to the East in
      an ordinary box car packed with ice.
1866 Parker Earle of Illinois shipped strawberries in iced boxes by rail from southern Illinois to
      Chicago.
1867 The first patent for a specialized refrigerator car (US Patent #71,423) was issued to JB
      Sutherland of Detroit, Michigan.
1868 William Davis of Detroit developed a refrigerator car cooled by a frozen ice-salt mixture, and
      patented it in the USA. The patent was sold to George Hammond, a local meat packer who
      went on to amass a fortune in refrigerated shipping.
1869 Henry Peyton Howard (1829-1913) of the United States transported a shipload of beef frozen
      in a salt-ice mixture from Indianola, Texas, to New Orleans and served it in hospitals, hotels
      and restaurants.
1873 Timothy C. Eastman exported chilled beef by ship from America to London, and shortly
      thereafter built up his trade to an annual tonnage of around 10,000 t. The insulated cargo
      space was cooled by ice, which was loaded on departure. The success of this method was
      limited by distance and climate.
1876- French engineer Charles Tellier and the steamship Frigorifique achieved the first overseas
1877 shipment of meat under artificial refrigeration. Three methyl-ether refrigerating machines
      kept the cargo in a chilled state during the 12,000 km voyage from France to Argentina and
      the return trip. The preservation of the meat was less than perfect; full success would have
      to wait until the voyage of the Paraguay.
                                                  Source:
                                                  http://www33.brinkster.com/iiiii/inventions/reftranstimeline.asp
HISTORY & BREAKTHROUGHS

1877- The French vessel Paraguay, equipped with refrigeration machinery by Ferdinand Carré,
1878 traveled from France to Buenos Aires and back. 150 t of meat, kept at -27 to -30 deg C,
      arrived in Argentina in excellent condition after 50 days.
1878 Gustavus F. Swift (1839-1903) of the United States put into operation a refrigerator car to
      ship fresh meats. The car body was well insulated and the interior cooled by ice. Fifteen
      years later the operation had expanded to 97 thousand units.
1879 Henry Bell (1848-1931) and John Bell (1850-1929) of Scotland and Joseph James Coleman
      (1838-1888) of England completed the Bell-Coleman dense-air machine on the Anchor liner
      Circassia, which successfully brought a cargo of chilled beef from the USA to London.
1879- The Strathleven, equipped with a Bell-Coleman air machine and loaded with beef, mutton,
1880 butter and kegs, sailed from Melbourne to London and arrived with the frozen cargo in good
      condition after a 9-week voyage of about 24,000 km.
1880 The first patent for a mechanically refrigerated railcar was issued in the USA (#230615, to
      Charles William Cooper).
1881 Alfred Seale Haslam (1844-1927) of England equipped the liner Orient with Haslam
      refrigeration compressors. He bought the Bell-Coleman dense-air patents in 1878 and
      eventually equipped four hundred plants and ships with Bell-Coleman machines.


                                                Source:
                                                http://www33.brinkster.com/iiiii/inventions/reftranstimeline.asp
HISTORY & BREAKTHROUGHS
1885 Berries from the Norfolk (Virginia) area were shipped by refrigerator car to New
       York.
1887   Parker Earle joined F.A. Thomas of Chicago in the fruit shipping business. The
       company owned 60 ice-cooled railcars by 1888, and 600 by 1891.
1888   An experimental Chicago-to-Florida shipment of beef from Armour and Company
       was made in a car cooled by ethyl chloride compression machinery.
1888   Florida oranges reached New York under refrigeration for the first time.
1889   The first cooled shipment of deciduous fruit from California entered the New York
       market.
1890   In London, first mechanically refrigerated barge introduced.
1890   After acquiring the patent rights of Franz Windhausen's CO2-compression
       refrigeration system, J. & E. Hall installed the first marine CO2 machine on the
       Highland Chief.
1898   Russia put its first refrigerator cars into service. Russia had 1900 such cars by 1908,
       3000 by 1910, 5900 by 1916. The cars were employed mainly for transport of
       Siberian butter. The journey from Siberia to Baltic ports lasted about 12 days.
       Reicing stations were set up each 2000 km.
                                              Source:
                                              http://www33.brinkster.com/iiiii/inventions/reftranstimeline.asp
HISTORY & BREAKTHROUGHS
1899   Refrigerated fruit traffic within the USA reached 90,000 t per year. Transport from
       California to NY averaged 12 days in 1900.
1900   A worldwide survey found 356 refrigerated ships, 37% of which had air machines,
       37% ammonia compressors and 25% CO2 compressors.
1900   Refrigerator cars in the USA numbered about 50,000.
1900   During the year, Great Britain imported 360,000 metric tons of refrigerated meat:
       220,000 t from Argentina, 95,000 t from New Zealand, and 45,000 t from Australia.
1901   The first refrigerated banana ship, the Port Morant, was equipped with a CO2
       machine and carried 23,000 stems at controlled temperature from Jamaica to
       England.
1901   Carl von Linde equipped a Russian train with a mobile mechanical refrigeration
       plant to distribute cooling to the cars carrying the goods. Similar systems
       continued to be used in Russia through at least 1975.
1902   According to a study of Lloyd's Register, 460 ships had refrigerating plants in 1902.
       The marine refrigeration industry at this time was dominated by the British.
1904   US pomologist G. Harold Powell introduced the technique of precooling, or
       removing field heat from the crop as rapidly as possible before transport.

                                             Source:
                                             http://www33.brinkster.com/iiiii/inventions/reftranstimeline.asp
HISTORY & BREAKTHROUGHS
1906 Pacific Fruit Express began operations with more than 6,000 refrigerated cars,
        transporting fruit and vegetables across the United States from Western producers
        to Eastern consumers.
1907    US traffic in refrigerated fruit reached a yearly total of 600,000 t, up from 430,000
        t in 1905.
1910    Great Britain refrigerated meat imports rose to 760,000 t/year.
1910    By this time British company J. & E. Hall had installed 1800 CO2 refrigeration
        machines in ships.
1913    British fleet included 230 refrigerated ships with total cargo capacity of 440,000 t.
1913    The number of thermally insulated railcars in the USA amounted to about
        100,000. Most of these were cooled by ice.
1923    London used 120 metal barges of 60 to 120 t, insulated or mechanically cooled, for
        transport of meat on inland waterways.
1925    The Pacific Fruit Express had 34,000 refrigerator cars and the Fruit Growers'
        Express 22,000.
1925-   Mechanically refrigerated road vehicles, especially for the delivery of milk and ice
1930    cream, began to appear around this time.
                                              Source:
                                              http://www33.brinkster.com/iiiii/inventions/reftranstimeline.asp
HISTORY & BREAKTHROUGHS
1931   The total volume of ice-cooled railcar cargo space in America was of the same
       order as that of public cold stores at the time (12.5 million m³, vs. 13 million m³).
1931   The number of refrigerator cars in the USA reached a maximum of about 183,000.
1935   Refrigerated imports into Britain in 1935 totaled 1 million metric tons of meat,
       500,000 t of butter, 130,000 t of cheese, 430,000 t of apples and pears, and 20
       million stems of bananas.
1936   The Italian army used 150 refrigerated containers to transport frozen meat to its
       troops on the Ethiopian front. Great Britain and the Netherlands had also built
       prototype refrigerated containers by this time.
1939   The USA had roughly 18,000 vehicles for refrigerated road transport, between
       2000-2500 of which were mechanically cooled. Many of the rest were kept cold by
       solid carbon dioxide ("dry ice"), regular ice, or eutectic plates. The number of
       these vehicles, as well as the proportion that were mechanically refrigerated,
       steadily grew during the next few decades with the growth of the trucking
       industry and the development of superhighways.


                                             Source:
                                             http://www33.brinkster.com/iiiii/inventions/reftranstimeline.asp
HISTORY & BREAKTHROUGHS
      1949    Refrigeration system made its way into the trucking industry by roof-
              mounted cooling device, patented by Fred Jones.
     1950’s   Temperature controlled movement of pharmaceuticals and medical supplies

     1950’s In the United States, Food and Drug Administration restrictions over the
            stability of the cold chain incited many of these companies to rely on
            specialty couriers rather than completely overhauling their supply chain
            facilities. A specialized cold chain industry was born

After 1960’s* Blown air containers were replaced by self powered containers.




      2010 Fed ex using GPS for tracking. Fedex Sense Aware



                   Source: http://people.hofstra.edu/geotrans/eng/ch5en/appl5en/ch5a5en.html
HISTORY & BREAKTHROUGHS
 1970, Tropicana orange juice was shipped in
 bulk via insulated boxcars in one weekly
 round-trip from Bradenton, Florida, to
 Kearny, New Jersey.
 By 1972, they were carrying around
 1,000,000 US gallons (around 38,00,000
 Litres )




Illinois Central Railroad #14713,
a ventilated fruit car dating from 1893




                                                                Unloading frozen pork from
A circa 1870 refrigerator car                                   the Clan Line ship Clan
design. Hatches in the roof               Top icing of bagged   MacDougall in the mid-20th
provided access to the                    vegetables in a       century
ice tanks at each end                     refrigerator car
BREAKTHROUGHS IN INDIA
In 2004, Safexpress Pvt Ltd first company in the Indian logistics
industry to use the GPS
Maersk India, had taken steps to facilitate research in the
production, harvesting, warehousing, and packaging of
bananas. The company provided end-to-end cold chain logistics
support, besides undertaking training of local banana exporters in
cold chain management.
BREAKTHROUGHS IN INDIA
Sun logistics, FlexiTank in 2010
BREAKTHROUGHS IN INDIA
Kale Logistics India Develop UPLIFT with ICAAI ( Air Cargo Agents Association of India )
Global Cold Chain Players
The Global top cold chain companies includes PRW companies from
Argentina, Australia, Canada, China, Denmark, Finland, Germany, Italy, Japan, Mexic
o, Norway, Sweden, Vietnam and United States of America

•   Americold logistics LLC , Canada, USA $ 1.62 billion
•   Versacold Argentina, Australia, Canada, New Zealand $ 900 million
•   Millard refrigerated services, Canada, USA $ 230 million
•   Nichirei logistics group inc., Japan, Netherlands, Poland $ 95 million
•   MUK Logistics GmbH, Germany $ 60 million
•   Nordic cold storage LLC, USA $ 27 million
•   Swire cold storage, Australia, Vietnam $7.5 million
•   Gruppo Marconi Logistica Italy
Value Parameters
Product Safety – Physical / Chemical / Microbiological
Network (Geographical coverage)
Transportation Time
Temperature Range Availability (Product Range Covered)
End to End Solutions (Integrated approach)
Temperature & Humidity Control
Tracking methods - Temperature and Location
Trust and Reliability of service provider
Regulatory Compliances
Security
*Carbon Footprint
Cost
Value Parameters (Revised)
Network (Geographical coverage)
Temperature Range Availability (Product Range Covered)
End to End Solutions (Integrated approach)
Temperature & Humidity Control
Tracking Methods
Real time information feedback
Security
Cost
Trust /Reliability of service provider
Flexibility of service provider
Ability to meet Tech Specs
Regulatory Compliances
Carbon Footprint
Transportation Time   *
Stakeholders
User Industries                                 Infrastructure
Fruit and Vegetable Businesses                  Warehouse / Cold Storage Owners
Food Processing Businesses                      Refrigeration and Cold Chain Equipment
Horticulture                                    Technology suppliers
Livestock Producers                             Refrigeration Solution Providers
Seafood Companies                               Specialized Equipment Providers
Pharmaceutical companies                        ICD’s (Inland Containers Depots)
Hotels and Restaurants                          Sea / Air Ports
Large format retailers and wholesalers          Transport Vehicles
Small Retailers                                 Security
Laboratories/ Healthcare Centers
Medical Equipment Manufacturers
Oil refineries and chemical industries
CRO’s ( Contract Research Organisations)

Authorities and Associations
Government Agencies (Planning commission, customs, etc.)
DCGI (Drugs Controller General of India )
CDSCO (Central Drug Standard Control Organization )
IARW ( International association of refrigerated warehouses )
Global Cold Chain Alliances
Academic and Research Institutions
Growers Association of Fruits and Vegetables
Stakeholders
Stakeholders
Intermediaries
Logistics Service Provider
Cold Logistics players (Shipping lines, Transporters, Container Companies)
Warehousing Agents
Supply Chain Solution Providers
Packaging Service Providers
Banks and Financial Institution
Consultants from the relevant spheres who are interested in knowledge building.

Others
Power / Electricity
Shelf Life
Temperature
Humidity
Distance
Seasonal Changes
Roads Connectivity
Cold Chain: India
In India 30 per cent of the fruits and vegetables grown in India get wasted because of
lack of cold storage facilities and energy infrastructure.

Only 8% of the produce is processed in India

                                          Commodity wise Capacity Utilization, 2000
•   The total cold chain market in             Commodity            Cold chain capacity
    India is estimated at $3.2 billion
                                                                       (Percentage)
    in 2009
                                                Potato                    92.82*
•   Expected to touch $9 Billion by
    2015                                    Multi purpose                  7.63
                                          Fruit & vegetable                1.07
•   Growing at 20-25 per cent CAGR
                                                 Fish                      0.73
•   Cold chain industry
    Cold storage 88 %                            Meat                      0.15
    Cold transport 12 %                     Dairy & milk                   0.68
•   100 % FDI allowed                    Others (Pharma, Life              0.36
                                              sciences)
Source: IBEF                                          Source: Global AgriSystem Pvt. Ltd. Report
Cold Chain: India
Food Sector
 User Industry Food                   India               Growth ( CAGR )
Processed Food               $ 17.8 Billion               13.5 %
Agriculture                  $ 200 Billion                 3.8 %
Branded Frozen Food          $ 212 Million                20-25 %
                      Source: Ministry of state for Food Processing Industries, CCI Report



Bio-Pharmaceutical Sector
User Industry                      India                 Growth ( CAGR )
Pharmaceutical                 $12 Billion                         10-11 %
Clinical Research             $ 2.2 Billion                          23 %
Generic Drugs                 $ 11 Billion                           17 %
Healthcare                    $ 36 Billion                           15 %
                                                                Sources : AIMA, BCG, CII
Current State: Cold Chain India
India has a total of roughly 5,400 cold storages with a capacity of
24 million MT, over 90 per cent of which are suitable to store
potato products only and are fairly archaic.




State wise Distribution of Cold Chains


Commodity wise Distribution Of Cold Storages

                                 Source: http://agmarknet.nic.in/coldstorage.htm
Cold Chain: Daily Consumption in India
•   9000 trucks of fruit
•   14000 trucks of vegetables
•   4000 trucks of potatoes
•   8000 trucks of onions
•   13 Lakh Chickens




                                 Source: Ingersol Rand at ICE EXPO 2010
Top Players in India
1) Snowman Frozen Foods                             4) RK Foodland
• A joint venture between Gateway                   • A 35 year old 3pl company with pan-India
     Distiparks, Mitsubishi Corp & Nichirei             presence.
     Logistics Group. Nichirei of Japan is the      • Clients include Domino’s, Abbott, GSK,
     fourth largest in this business in the world       Cadbury.
      Income $10.2 million in 2010
2) Fresh and Healthy Enterprises                    5) GATI RedSun
• A subsidiary of the state-owned Container         • A leading cold chain company for perishable
     Corporation of India (Concor), which deals         goods and frozen items
     in transporting containers via rail            • The Hyderabad-based Gati recently bought
• India’s largest CA store with capacity of             a majority stake in the company. Gati plans
     12,000 MT at Rai in Sonepat, Haryana.              to scale up operations in cold chain logistics

3) Coldstar Logistics                               6) Adani Agrifresh
• Incubated by Tuscan Ventures, a $ 50              • A logistics venture formed by the Gujarat-
    million venture capital fund in 2010.               based $ 6 Billion Adani Group
• 3 existing and 9 WIP warehouses across            • Has invested $ 40 Millions in setting up 3
    India                                               CA stores in HP.
                                                    • Promotes FARMPIK Brand in North India
COLD CHAIN: TRENDS IN INDIA
Backward Integration by Retail companies
Many Ice factories have converted their factories into cold storages

FOOD SECTOR
Increase in frozen food consumption, meat, fish, canned, instant food items
Acceptance of frozen vegetables, changing mindset
Increase in per capita income increases dairy, poultry consumption

BIO-PHARMA SECTOR
Development of vaccines,
Increase in clinical trials logistics
Increased share of refrigerated drugs

TECHNOLOGICAL TRENDS
Some reefers are equipped with a water cooling system, which can be used if the
reefer is stored below deck on a vessel without adequate ventilation to remove the
heat generated.
Water cooling systems are expensive, so modern vessels rely more on ventilation to
remove heat from cargo holds, and the use of water cooling systems is declining.
Classification of cold chains
• Negative temp. (Frozen Material) Cold Chain
• Positive Temp. (Chilled Material) Cold Chain
• Single Product Cold Chain
• Multi Product Cold Chain
• Supply Side Cold Chain
• Distribution Side Cold Chain
Cold Chain: Front End
• Industry Expos :                   • Advertisements
  ICE EXPO (India Cold Chain Expo)   • Company Websites
  Food Tec India                     • Direct Sales
  Dairy and Food Tech EXPO
  Food And Bev Tech
• Trade Magazines
  Log India
  TransREporter
  Logistics Times
  FoodAndBev
• Consultants
  ACR Consulting
  Cross Tree Consultants
  Fresh Food Technologies
Advertisements
• Integrated cold
  chain service
  provider
• Typical ads listing
  various services and
  stats.
• QR Code and
  helpline to guide
  customers towards
  further action
Advertisements
3rd Party and Warehousing
solutions provider
Advertisements
• Backend products
  provider
• Product display
• State wise contact
  details, QR Code,
  toll free no.
Ads of Equipment
    providers
Cold Chain: Backend
•   Refrigeration system
•   Insulated Wall Panels, Metal Roofing system
•   Material handling equipment's
•   Pallet racking system
•   Dock equipment's and special doors
•   Special cold storage doors
•   Contractors and Civil Engineers
•   Vehicle reefer units
•   Vehicle supply Fresh line Processing equipment
•   Process Grading and Sorting
•   Consultants
     –   Food Service Distribution Centre concept design consultant
     –   Local Indian Architectural & Structural Consultant: Stup Consultants
     –   Integrated Building Management System : Tata Honeywell
     –   Supply Chain Solution consultant : Keogh Consulting Primary Research – ICE EXPO 2011
                                                          Source:
Backend: Refrigeration Providers
WAREHOUSES (Static Refrigeration)




  Voltas    Carrier   Kirloskar   Ingersoll           IBK             Alfa Laval
                      Neumatic      Rand         Refrigeration

Major Compressor Manufacturers:
FREON: Danfoss (Major market share – 50%), Emerson, Bitzer
AMMONIA: Kirloskar Pneumatic Ltd (60% Market share), Frick
(Indian Companies)
TRANSPORT REFRIGERATION (Refrigeration on the move)
Carrier, Thermoking, Blue Star – Total of 70 % Market share
                                  Source: Primary Research – Akhil Lutharia, Consultant
Insulation Experts
• Owens corning
• Lamiflux
• Bayer Material Sciences
Material Handling Equipment – Forklifts
• Voltas Limited
• Godrej & Boyce
Pallet Racking and shelving systems
•   SSI- Schaefer
•   Godrej & Boyce
Doors and Docks
•   Metaflex
•   Dan Foss
•   Lloyd Insulations (India) Limited
•   Salco
•   HiCon
•   Rite-Hite
Backend: Role of Consultants
• Refrigeration Equipment
  Investigate mechanical equipment
  (evaporators, compressors, condensers, humidifiers, etc.), Recommend
  and implement changes, if necessary, to improve functionality or reduce
  operating costs, or both.
• Utility Audits
  Review of previous and current configuration, usage and billings.
• Ripening/Precooling Technology
  Optimize results with existing equipment, and also show how investments
  in new equipment could improve the bottom line.
• Project Design & Management
  Needs Analysis, Design, and Construction Management for additional
  capacity.
Transportation
                       First Mile & Last Mile
Reefer trucks          Delivery
Sample Cold Room
Cold Chain Cost breakup
      Capital Expenditure                         Costs

Construction cost           Rs. 300-350 per sq ft.

Cooling Equipment           Rs. 18,000-20,000 per MT
Power Consumption           3.5 KW per MT
Diesel Generator            Rs. 50-80 lakhs
Forklifts                   Rs. 4-7 lakhs
Pallets                     Rs. 500
Reefer Trucks               Rs. 25-30 lakhs for 9-13 tonnes




                                  Source: Anderson Consulting Report on cold chain
Cold Chain Cost breakup
Office + Logistics                               Costs
Communication System         Rs. 8-10 lakhs
(VSAT Links)
Office infrastructure        Rs. 50-60 lakhs
Computing Power              Rs. 5 lakhs
Website Design               Rs. 1-2 Lakh
Working capital              Rs. 3 crores
 Blanket Costs               Rs. 50,000-52,000 per MT + reefer
( Excluding civil constr.)   vehicles




                              Source: Anderson Consulting Report on cold chain
Drivers
• Growth in organized retail
     Reliance, future, bharti- walmart, etc.
• Growth in processed food sector
     $ 70 bn in 2010. Projected growth to $ 150bn by 2015
• Changing consumption pattern
• Increase in consumption levels
    22 million MT supply against 31 million MT demand
• Government Initiatives
    Mega food parks, Subsidies
Challenges
•   Lack of Road Infrastructure
•   Continuity of the cold supply chain
•   Uneven distribution of cold chains
•   High capital investment
         -Rs.80-90/sq.ft.($ 1.6-2.0) against Rs.30/sq.ft. ($ 0.6) in west
•   Power supply
         -17-18% power deficit
        -30% of total expenses against 10% in west
•   Management of different temperatures
•   Awareness and Mindsets
•   Error Irreversibility
    -Highly temperature sensitive cargo
Government Policy & Initiatives
1. All the relevant schemes pertaining to the Cold Chain Industry have been
outlined and a separate compendium has been prepared containing all
these schemes.
2. A Special Purpose Vehicle has been set up for the Cold Chain Logistics
3. Setting up of National Centre for Cold Chain Development (NCCD).

NCCD Activities are:
• Training and Capacity Building
• Research and Development
• Building standards through International benchmarking
• Interaction with National / International bodies for development of cold
  chain infrastructure and trade in perishable
Government Incentives
Some of these incentives are
• Budget 2010-2011 proposed a concessional import duty of five per cent
  with full exemption from service tax to set up and expand cold chains.
  The proposal also included duty-free import of refrigeration unit, which is
  required to make refrigerated vans or trucks. It also exempted trailers and
  semi-trailers used in agriculture from excise duty
• The Budget exempted air-conditioning equipment and refrigeration
  panels used in cold chain infrastructure, including conveyor belts, from
  excise duty. It also extended excise duty exemption to conveyor belts.
• Budget 2009-2010, Government of India introduced tax benefits for
  companies making investments in setting up cold chain facilities
• Other past incentives include access to external commercial
  borrowings, 100 per cent FDI and provision of up to 25 per cent project
  costs involved in setting up cold storage facilities provided by the
  Government under the Capital Investment Subsidy Scheme
Need Gaps
Lack of knowhow and trained manpower

Lack of backward & forward linkages to supplement
cold chain (High VDC - Variable Distribution Cost)

High cost of power: Agricultural sector is offered
subsidized power tariffs by the Government of India,
Cold chain industry is instead subjected to industrial
power tariffs.
Need Gaps
104 million metric tons
Perishable produce is transported between cities each
year.
Only 4 million metric tons
moves via reefer mode.

Optimization in reefer transport
• Lack of two-way cargo movement/ back haulage
• delay timely deliveries and reduce the efficient utilization of
  fleets.
Need Gaps
Infrastructure: Coolers, warehouses, refrigerated
trucks, carriers, shopping malls and others. Needs to study the
potential risks and the return on investment (RoI)

Third-party logistics:
• Manual- handling reduces the product quality and life.
• Lack of end-to-end solutions. One can also adapt state-of-the-
  art techniques such as cross docking that will reduce the
  transit times and inventory.

FP industry: The Central government allows 100% FDI in this
sector.
Need Gaps
• Reefer location tracking challenges (Technology
  effectiveness & penetration low)
• Discontinuous Energy Supply for hours (Backup
  power is very expensive)
• Lack of 3 Party solution providers for small players.
  Geographical and service range expanding on project
  basis from big players. Logistics providers with air conditioned trucks,
   automatic handling equipment and trained manpower will provide end-to-end
   support.

• Education and awareness. Low acceptance due to
  high costs
Fruit and Vegetable Businesses 2                                       2                                    3                                    1                      1                                    1                      3          2                                            1                                     1                                    2                            3

                            Chocolates 3                                       1                                    1                                    2                      1                                    2                      3          2                                            1                                     2                                    2                            1

                                  Diary 3                                      1                                    2                                    3                      3                                    3                      3          3                                            1                                     2                                    2                            3

                   Seafood Companies 1                                         2                                    1                                    2                      2                                    2                      3          2                                            1                                     2                                    2                            2

                   Livestock Producers 1                                       2                                    1                                    2                      1                                    2                      3          2                                            2                                     2                                    2                            2

                                Hotels 1                                       3                                    2                                    1                      1                                    3                      2          2                                            3                                     2                                    2                            3

             Quick Service Restaurants 3                                       3                                    2                                    3                      3                                    3                      3          3                                            3                                     3                                    2                            3

Large Format Retailers and Wholesalers
                                         3                                     3                                    3                                    3                      3                                    2                      3          2                                            3                                     2                                    2                            3

                        Small Retailers 1                                      2                                    2                                    1                      1                                    2                      1          2                                            2                                     1                                    1                            2
                                             Network (Geographical coverage)

                                                                                   Temperature Range Availability

                                                                                                                        Temperature & Humidity Control

                                                                                                                                                             Tracking Methods

                                                                                                                                                                                    Real time information feedback

                                                                                                                                                                                                                         Product Security

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                Cost

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           Trust /Reliability of service provider

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                        Flexibility of service provider

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                              Technical Standards Compliance

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                   Regulatory Compliances

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                Transportation Time
Segmentation Matrix
Strategy Canvas
   6
   5
   4
   3              Snowman
   2              RK Foodland
   1              Fresh & Healthy
   0              ColdStar
                  GATI Redsun
                  Adani Agrifresh
                  ColdEx
TRENDS
PPP model for supply chains
• Indian cold chain business is fragmented in a big way.
• Organised retailers can give a boost to the much needed
  supply chain logistics in the country.
• More private sector investment is required in the areas of
  infrastructure especially in warehousing, technology, cold
  chain and logistics in order to harness the full potential of the
  Indian food processing sector
Increased FDI in Multi-brand Retail on the anvil
This will boost the investments in the cold chain infrastructure.
Backward Integration by Large Format Retailers
These companies are investing in developing their own cold-
chains eg. Future Supply Chains
TRENDS
Center’s NCCD
The Central government has established the National Centre for Cold
Chain Development (NCCD) as an autonomous body.
The NCCD has constituted the following committees:
● Technical specification and Standards Committees
● Project preparation, Appraisal and Project Certification Committee
● Training and HRD Committee
● R&D Committee
● Test Laboratory and Product Certification Committee
● Application of Non-conventional Energy Sources in Cold Chain
Infrastructure.
● The establishment of cold chain is being supported through
programmes of NHM, NHB, APEDA and Ministry of Food Processing
Industries.
Thank you
reefers
Shipping lines
Maersk Line, Evergreen Line, Hamburg
Sud, Hapag-Lloyd, K Line, Mac
Andrews, MISC, CSAV-Norasia, Rickmers
Line, Safmarine,Yang Ming Line, UASC and Zim
Line. India’s state-owned shipping company
Shipping Corp. of India, is also a member.




Source:
http://www.livemint.com/2007/09/18020040/
Shipping-refrigerated-cargo-fr.html

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Cold Chain Logistics

  • 1. Cold Chain Logistics Sector Analysis Nov-Dec, 2011 Rishab Sapra & Shridhar Joshi
  • 2. Cold Chain Logistics Sector Analysis by Rishab Sapra rishabsapra@gmail.com Shridhar Joshi joshridhar@gmail.com Business Design, 2011-2013 Welingkar Institute of Management and Research
  • 3. What is Logistics ? • Introduction to Cold Chain Logistics • History and Breakthroughs • Global Scenario • Indian Ice Age • Value Parameters • Users
  • 4. What is Logistics ? Logistics is the management of the flow of goods from Transportation origin to destination to meet customer requirements Security Inventory Right Time, Right Place @ Minimum Cost Logistics Packaging Warehousing Started as a business concept in 1950’s Information Management Source: Global Agri System Pvt. Ltd. Report
  • 5. What is Cold Chain Logistics? TEMPERATURE COLD CHAIN LOGISTICS CONTROL LOGISTICS (REFRIGERATION) Major Sectors : Food and Beverages, Bio-Pharmaceutical The Cold chain logistics infrastructure Supply Transport Storage Transport End Customer Procurement • Precooling System • Refrigerated • Cold Storage • Refrigerated • Retail, Terminal, • Farms (Rural Trucks • Warehouses Trucks Markets, Factory, Markets) • Refrigerated • Refrigerated Ports, Airport • Manufacturers Railway Wagons Railway Wagons • Refrigerated Cargo • Refrigerated Cargo Containers Containers
  • 6. Global Cold Chain Facts: Food Sector Fruits & Meat Fish & Seafood Dairy Products Beverages Vegetables In European and American developed countries, the rate of refrigerated transport is up to 80-90%, pre-cooling preservation is up to 80-100%, and the loss rate is below 5%. 25% of the total food production is processed foods. A booming industry
  • 7. Cold chain in Food Sector Industry Temperature Standards Banana Chill Frozen Deep Frozen 13 C 2C -18 C -29 C
  • 8. Temperature Product Refrigerated Shelf Life Optimum (Days) Temperature (Celcius) and Apple Bananas 90-240 7-28 0 13.5 Shelf Life Bell Peppers Cabbage 21-35 14-20 7 1 Eggs 180 1.1 Onions 30-180 1 Lettuce 12-14 0.6 Fresh Meat (beef, 14-65 -2 lamb, pork, poultry) Oranges 21-90 7 Pears 120-180 -0.6 Potatoes 30-50 10 Seafood (shrimp, 120-360 -17.8 lobster, crab) Strawberries 5-10 0.6 Tomatoes 7-14 12
  • 9. Global Cold Chain Facts: Bio-Pharmaceutical Pharmaceutical Biotech Vaccines Blood Products Clinical Trials Global Bio-Pharma Cold-chain market 2010 : $5.1 billion 2011 : $6.6 billion 2014 : 7 of the top 10 global pharma products in will require cold-chain handling Vaccines growing on average 8% per year for the next five years Source: www.fiercebiotech.com/press-releases/ source: www.coldchainpharm.com/
  • 10. Cold chain in Pharmaceutical Sector
  • 11. Global Cold Chain- Pharmaceutical Sector Bio-pharma logistics spending growth Cold chain logistics spending expanded from $5.1 billion in 2008 to $6.6 billion in 2011 Cold chain shipment growth by region Sources: http://www.aircargoinsights.com/news/cold-chain-pharmaceuticals-worth-billions/ http://www.aircargoinsights.com/more-market/global-biopharma-demand-on-the-rise/
  • 12. HISTORY & BREAKTHROUGHS 1797 British fishermen used natural ice to preserve their fish stock piles Late 1820’s Movement of food from rural areas to urban consumption markets 1851s Mechanical refrigeration and Air-conditioning plant patented by Dr. John Gorrie 1867 The refrigerated railroad car was patented by J.B. Sutherland of Detroit 1870s Trade of food between colonial powers and their colonies France received mutton carcasses from South America Great Britain imported frozen beef from Australia, pork from New Zealand 1882 SS Dunedin, the first ship to complete transportation of frozen meat. 1910 600,000 tons of frozen meat was being brought into Great Britain alone. 1920’s Group of CFC’s - Freon used in refrigeration was developed. Source: http://people.hofstra.edu/geotrans/eng/ch5en/appl5en/ch5a5en.html
  • 13. HISTORY & BREAKTHROUGHS 1857 The first shipment of refrigerated beef was made from the Chicago stockyards to the East in an ordinary box car packed with ice. 1866 Parker Earle of Illinois shipped strawberries in iced boxes by rail from southern Illinois to Chicago. 1867 The first patent for a specialized refrigerator car (US Patent #71,423) was issued to JB Sutherland of Detroit, Michigan. 1868 William Davis of Detroit developed a refrigerator car cooled by a frozen ice-salt mixture, and patented it in the USA. The patent was sold to George Hammond, a local meat packer who went on to amass a fortune in refrigerated shipping. 1869 Henry Peyton Howard (1829-1913) of the United States transported a shipload of beef frozen in a salt-ice mixture from Indianola, Texas, to New Orleans and served it in hospitals, hotels and restaurants. 1873 Timothy C. Eastman exported chilled beef by ship from America to London, and shortly thereafter built up his trade to an annual tonnage of around 10,000 t. The insulated cargo space was cooled by ice, which was loaded on departure. The success of this method was limited by distance and climate. 1876- French engineer Charles Tellier and the steamship Frigorifique achieved the first overseas 1877 shipment of meat under artificial refrigeration. Three methyl-ether refrigerating machines kept the cargo in a chilled state during the 12,000 km voyage from France to Argentina and the return trip. The preservation of the meat was less than perfect; full success would have to wait until the voyage of the Paraguay. Source: http://www33.brinkster.com/iiiii/inventions/reftranstimeline.asp
  • 14. HISTORY & BREAKTHROUGHS 1877- The French vessel Paraguay, equipped with refrigeration machinery by Ferdinand Carré, 1878 traveled from France to Buenos Aires and back. 150 t of meat, kept at -27 to -30 deg C, arrived in Argentina in excellent condition after 50 days. 1878 Gustavus F. Swift (1839-1903) of the United States put into operation a refrigerator car to ship fresh meats. The car body was well insulated and the interior cooled by ice. Fifteen years later the operation had expanded to 97 thousand units. 1879 Henry Bell (1848-1931) and John Bell (1850-1929) of Scotland and Joseph James Coleman (1838-1888) of England completed the Bell-Coleman dense-air machine on the Anchor liner Circassia, which successfully brought a cargo of chilled beef from the USA to London. 1879- The Strathleven, equipped with a Bell-Coleman air machine and loaded with beef, mutton, 1880 butter and kegs, sailed from Melbourne to London and arrived with the frozen cargo in good condition after a 9-week voyage of about 24,000 km. 1880 The first patent for a mechanically refrigerated railcar was issued in the USA (#230615, to Charles William Cooper). 1881 Alfred Seale Haslam (1844-1927) of England equipped the liner Orient with Haslam refrigeration compressors. He bought the Bell-Coleman dense-air patents in 1878 and eventually equipped four hundred plants and ships with Bell-Coleman machines. Source: http://www33.brinkster.com/iiiii/inventions/reftranstimeline.asp
  • 15. HISTORY & BREAKTHROUGHS 1885 Berries from the Norfolk (Virginia) area were shipped by refrigerator car to New York. 1887 Parker Earle joined F.A. Thomas of Chicago in the fruit shipping business. The company owned 60 ice-cooled railcars by 1888, and 600 by 1891. 1888 An experimental Chicago-to-Florida shipment of beef from Armour and Company was made in a car cooled by ethyl chloride compression machinery. 1888 Florida oranges reached New York under refrigeration for the first time. 1889 The first cooled shipment of deciduous fruit from California entered the New York market. 1890 In London, first mechanically refrigerated barge introduced. 1890 After acquiring the patent rights of Franz Windhausen's CO2-compression refrigeration system, J. & E. Hall installed the first marine CO2 machine on the Highland Chief. 1898 Russia put its first refrigerator cars into service. Russia had 1900 such cars by 1908, 3000 by 1910, 5900 by 1916. The cars were employed mainly for transport of Siberian butter. The journey from Siberia to Baltic ports lasted about 12 days. Reicing stations were set up each 2000 km. Source: http://www33.brinkster.com/iiiii/inventions/reftranstimeline.asp
  • 16. HISTORY & BREAKTHROUGHS 1899 Refrigerated fruit traffic within the USA reached 90,000 t per year. Transport from California to NY averaged 12 days in 1900. 1900 A worldwide survey found 356 refrigerated ships, 37% of which had air machines, 37% ammonia compressors and 25% CO2 compressors. 1900 Refrigerator cars in the USA numbered about 50,000. 1900 During the year, Great Britain imported 360,000 metric tons of refrigerated meat: 220,000 t from Argentina, 95,000 t from New Zealand, and 45,000 t from Australia. 1901 The first refrigerated banana ship, the Port Morant, was equipped with a CO2 machine and carried 23,000 stems at controlled temperature from Jamaica to England. 1901 Carl von Linde equipped a Russian train with a mobile mechanical refrigeration plant to distribute cooling to the cars carrying the goods. Similar systems continued to be used in Russia through at least 1975. 1902 According to a study of Lloyd's Register, 460 ships had refrigerating plants in 1902. The marine refrigeration industry at this time was dominated by the British. 1904 US pomologist G. Harold Powell introduced the technique of precooling, or removing field heat from the crop as rapidly as possible before transport. Source: http://www33.brinkster.com/iiiii/inventions/reftranstimeline.asp
  • 17. HISTORY & BREAKTHROUGHS 1906 Pacific Fruit Express began operations with more than 6,000 refrigerated cars, transporting fruit and vegetables across the United States from Western producers to Eastern consumers. 1907 US traffic in refrigerated fruit reached a yearly total of 600,000 t, up from 430,000 t in 1905. 1910 Great Britain refrigerated meat imports rose to 760,000 t/year. 1910 By this time British company J. & E. Hall had installed 1800 CO2 refrigeration machines in ships. 1913 British fleet included 230 refrigerated ships with total cargo capacity of 440,000 t. 1913 The number of thermally insulated railcars in the USA amounted to about 100,000. Most of these were cooled by ice. 1923 London used 120 metal barges of 60 to 120 t, insulated or mechanically cooled, for transport of meat on inland waterways. 1925 The Pacific Fruit Express had 34,000 refrigerator cars and the Fruit Growers' Express 22,000. 1925- Mechanically refrigerated road vehicles, especially for the delivery of milk and ice 1930 cream, began to appear around this time. Source: http://www33.brinkster.com/iiiii/inventions/reftranstimeline.asp
  • 18. HISTORY & BREAKTHROUGHS 1931 The total volume of ice-cooled railcar cargo space in America was of the same order as that of public cold stores at the time (12.5 million m³, vs. 13 million m³). 1931 The number of refrigerator cars in the USA reached a maximum of about 183,000. 1935 Refrigerated imports into Britain in 1935 totaled 1 million metric tons of meat, 500,000 t of butter, 130,000 t of cheese, 430,000 t of apples and pears, and 20 million stems of bananas. 1936 The Italian army used 150 refrigerated containers to transport frozen meat to its troops on the Ethiopian front. Great Britain and the Netherlands had also built prototype refrigerated containers by this time. 1939 The USA had roughly 18,000 vehicles for refrigerated road transport, between 2000-2500 of which were mechanically cooled. Many of the rest were kept cold by solid carbon dioxide ("dry ice"), regular ice, or eutectic plates. The number of these vehicles, as well as the proportion that were mechanically refrigerated, steadily grew during the next few decades with the growth of the trucking industry and the development of superhighways. Source: http://www33.brinkster.com/iiiii/inventions/reftranstimeline.asp
  • 19. HISTORY & BREAKTHROUGHS 1949 Refrigeration system made its way into the trucking industry by roof- mounted cooling device, patented by Fred Jones. 1950’s Temperature controlled movement of pharmaceuticals and medical supplies 1950’s In the United States, Food and Drug Administration restrictions over the stability of the cold chain incited many of these companies to rely on specialty couriers rather than completely overhauling their supply chain facilities. A specialized cold chain industry was born After 1960’s* Blown air containers were replaced by self powered containers. 2010 Fed ex using GPS for tracking. Fedex Sense Aware Source: http://people.hofstra.edu/geotrans/eng/ch5en/appl5en/ch5a5en.html
  • 20. HISTORY & BREAKTHROUGHS 1970, Tropicana orange juice was shipped in bulk via insulated boxcars in one weekly round-trip from Bradenton, Florida, to Kearny, New Jersey. By 1972, they were carrying around 1,000,000 US gallons (around 38,00,000 Litres ) Illinois Central Railroad #14713, a ventilated fruit car dating from 1893 Unloading frozen pork from A circa 1870 refrigerator car the Clan Line ship Clan design. Hatches in the roof Top icing of bagged MacDougall in the mid-20th provided access to the vegetables in a century ice tanks at each end refrigerator car
  • 21. BREAKTHROUGHS IN INDIA In 2004, Safexpress Pvt Ltd first company in the Indian logistics industry to use the GPS Maersk India, had taken steps to facilitate research in the production, harvesting, warehousing, and packaging of bananas. The company provided end-to-end cold chain logistics support, besides undertaking training of local banana exporters in cold chain management.
  • 22. BREAKTHROUGHS IN INDIA Sun logistics, FlexiTank in 2010
  • 23. BREAKTHROUGHS IN INDIA Kale Logistics India Develop UPLIFT with ICAAI ( Air Cargo Agents Association of India )
  • 24. Global Cold Chain Players The Global top cold chain companies includes PRW companies from Argentina, Australia, Canada, China, Denmark, Finland, Germany, Italy, Japan, Mexic o, Norway, Sweden, Vietnam and United States of America • Americold logistics LLC , Canada, USA $ 1.62 billion • Versacold Argentina, Australia, Canada, New Zealand $ 900 million • Millard refrigerated services, Canada, USA $ 230 million • Nichirei logistics group inc., Japan, Netherlands, Poland $ 95 million • MUK Logistics GmbH, Germany $ 60 million • Nordic cold storage LLC, USA $ 27 million • Swire cold storage, Australia, Vietnam $7.5 million • Gruppo Marconi Logistica Italy
  • 25. Value Parameters Product Safety – Physical / Chemical / Microbiological Network (Geographical coverage) Transportation Time Temperature Range Availability (Product Range Covered) End to End Solutions (Integrated approach) Temperature & Humidity Control Tracking methods - Temperature and Location Trust and Reliability of service provider Regulatory Compliances Security *Carbon Footprint Cost
  • 26. Value Parameters (Revised) Network (Geographical coverage) Temperature Range Availability (Product Range Covered) End to End Solutions (Integrated approach) Temperature & Humidity Control Tracking Methods Real time information feedback Security Cost Trust /Reliability of service provider Flexibility of service provider Ability to meet Tech Specs Regulatory Compliances Carbon Footprint Transportation Time *
  • 27. Stakeholders User Industries Infrastructure Fruit and Vegetable Businesses Warehouse / Cold Storage Owners Food Processing Businesses Refrigeration and Cold Chain Equipment Horticulture Technology suppliers Livestock Producers Refrigeration Solution Providers Seafood Companies Specialized Equipment Providers Pharmaceutical companies ICD’s (Inland Containers Depots) Hotels and Restaurants Sea / Air Ports Large format retailers and wholesalers Transport Vehicles Small Retailers Security Laboratories/ Healthcare Centers Medical Equipment Manufacturers Oil refineries and chemical industries CRO’s ( Contract Research Organisations) Authorities and Associations Government Agencies (Planning commission, customs, etc.) DCGI (Drugs Controller General of India ) CDSCO (Central Drug Standard Control Organization ) IARW ( International association of refrigerated warehouses ) Global Cold Chain Alliances Academic and Research Institutions Growers Association of Fruits and Vegetables
  • 28. Stakeholders Stakeholders Intermediaries Logistics Service Provider Cold Logistics players (Shipping lines, Transporters, Container Companies) Warehousing Agents Supply Chain Solution Providers Packaging Service Providers Banks and Financial Institution Consultants from the relevant spheres who are interested in knowledge building. Others Power / Electricity Shelf Life Temperature Humidity Distance Seasonal Changes Roads Connectivity
  • 29. Cold Chain: India In India 30 per cent of the fruits and vegetables grown in India get wasted because of lack of cold storage facilities and energy infrastructure. Only 8% of the produce is processed in India Commodity wise Capacity Utilization, 2000 • The total cold chain market in Commodity Cold chain capacity India is estimated at $3.2 billion (Percentage) in 2009 Potato 92.82* • Expected to touch $9 Billion by 2015 Multi purpose 7.63 Fruit & vegetable 1.07 • Growing at 20-25 per cent CAGR Fish 0.73 • Cold chain industry Cold storage 88 % Meat 0.15 Cold transport 12 % Dairy & milk 0.68 • 100 % FDI allowed Others (Pharma, Life 0.36 sciences) Source: IBEF Source: Global AgriSystem Pvt. Ltd. Report
  • 30. Cold Chain: India Food Sector User Industry Food India Growth ( CAGR ) Processed Food $ 17.8 Billion 13.5 % Agriculture $ 200 Billion 3.8 % Branded Frozen Food $ 212 Million 20-25 % Source: Ministry of state for Food Processing Industries, CCI Report Bio-Pharmaceutical Sector User Industry India Growth ( CAGR ) Pharmaceutical $12 Billion 10-11 % Clinical Research $ 2.2 Billion 23 % Generic Drugs $ 11 Billion 17 % Healthcare $ 36 Billion 15 % Sources : AIMA, BCG, CII
  • 31. Current State: Cold Chain India India has a total of roughly 5,400 cold storages with a capacity of 24 million MT, over 90 per cent of which are suitable to store potato products only and are fairly archaic. State wise Distribution of Cold Chains Commodity wise Distribution Of Cold Storages Source: http://agmarknet.nic.in/coldstorage.htm
  • 32. Cold Chain: Daily Consumption in India • 9000 trucks of fruit • 14000 trucks of vegetables • 4000 trucks of potatoes • 8000 trucks of onions • 13 Lakh Chickens Source: Ingersol Rand at ICE EXPO 2010
  • 33. Top Players in India 1) Snowman Frozen Foods 4) RK Foodland • A joint venture between Gateway • A 35 year old 3pl company with pan-India Distiparks, Mitsubishi Corp & Nichirei presence. Logistics Group. Nichirei of Japan is the • Clients include Domino’s, Abbott, GSK, fourth largest in this business in the world Cadbury. Income $10.2 million in 2010 2) Fresh and Healthy Enterprises 5) GATI RedSun • A subsidiary of the state-owned Container • A leading cold chain company for perishable Corporation of India (Concor), which deals goods and frozen items in transporting containers via rail • The Hyderabad-based Gati recently bought • India’s largest CA store with capacity of a majority stake in the company. Gati plans 12,000 MT at Rai in Sonepat, Haryana. to scale up operations in cold chain logistics 3) Coldstar Logistics 6) Adani Agrifresh • Incubated by Tuscan Ventures, a $ 50 • A logistics venture formed by the Gujarat- million venture capital fund in 2010. based $ 6 Billion Adani Group • 3 existing and 9 WIP warehouses across • Has invested $ 40 Millions in setting up 3 India CA stores in HP. • Promotes FARMPIK Brand in North India
  • 34. COLD CHAIN: TRENDS IN INDIA Backward Integration by Retail companies Many Ice factories have converted their factories into cold storages FOOD SECTOR Increase in frozen food consumption, meat, fish, canned, instant food items Acceptance of frozen vegetables, changing mindset Increase in per capita income increases dairy, poultry consumption BIO-PHARMA SECTOR Development of vaccines, Increase in clinical trials logistics Increased share of refrigerated drugs TECHNOLOGICAL TRENDS Some reefers are equipped with a water cooling system, which can be used if the reefer is stored below deck on a vessel without adequate ventilation to remove the heat generated. Water cooling systems are expensive, so modern vessels rely more on ventilation to remove heat from cargo holds, and the use of water cooling systems is declining.
  • 35. Classification of cold chains • Negative temp. (Frozen Material) Cold Chain • Positive Temp. (Chilled Material) Cold Chain • Single Product Cold Chain • Multi Product Cold Chain • Supply Side Cold Chain • Distribution Side Cold Chain
  • 36. Cold Chain: Front End • Industry Expos : • Advertisements ICE EXPO (India Cold Chain Expo) • Company Websites Food Tec India • Direct Sales Dairy and Food Tech EXPO Food And Bev Tech • Trade Magazines Log India TransREporter Logistics Times FoodAndBev • Consultants ACR Consulting Cross Tree Consultants Fresh Food Technologies
  • 37. Advertisements • Integrated cold chain service provider • Typical ads listing various services and stats. • QR Code and helpline to guide customers towards further action
  • 38. Advertisements 3rd Party and Warehousing solutions provider
  • 39. Advertisements • Backend products provider • Product display • State wise contact details, QR Code, toll free no.
  • 40. Ads of Equipment providers
  • 41. Cold Chain: Backend • Refrigeration system • Insulated Wall Panels, Metal Roofing system • Material handling equipment's • Pallet racking system • Dock equipment's and special doors • Special cold storage doors • Contractors and Civil Engineers • Vehicle reefer units • Vehicle supply Fresh line Processing equipment • Process Grading and Sorting • Consultants – Food Service Distribution Centre concept design consultant – Local Indian Architectural & Structural Consultant: Stup Consultants – Integrated Building Management System : Tata Honeywell – Supply Chain Solution consultant : Keogh Consulting Primary Research – ICE EXPO 2011 Source:
  • 42. Backend: Refrigeration Providers WAREHOUSES (Static Refrigeration) Voltas Carrier Kirloskar Ingersoll IBK Alfa Laval Neumatic Rand Refrigeration Major Compressor Manufacturers: FREON: Danfoss (Major market share – 50%), Emerson, Bitzer AMMONIA: Kirloskar Pneumatic Ltd (60% Market share), Frick (Indian Companies) TRANSPORT REFRIGERATION (Refrigeration on the move) Carrier, Thermoking, Blue Star – Total of 70 % Market share Source: Primary Research – Akhil Lutharia, Consultant
  • 43. Insulation Experts • Owens corning • Lamiflux • Bayer Material Sciences
  • 44. Material Handling Equipment – Forklifts • Voltas Limited • Godrej & Boyce
  • 45. Pallet Racking and shelving systems • SSI- Schaefer • Godrej & Boyce
  • 46. Doors and Docks • Metaflex • Dan Foss • Lloyd Insulations (India) Limited • Salco • HiCon • Rite-Hite
  • 47. Backend: Role of Consultants • Refrigeration Equipment Investigate mechanical equipment (evaporators, compressors, condensers, humidifiers, etc.), Recommend and implement changes, if necessary, to improve functionality or reduce operating costs, or both. • Utility Audits Review of previous and current configuration, usage and billings. • Ripening/Precooling Technology Optimize results with existing equipment, and also show how investments in new equipment could improve the bottom line. • Project Design & Management Needs Analysis, Design, and Construction Management for additional capacity.
  • 48. Transportation First Mile & Last Mile Reefer trucks Delivery
  • 50. Cold Chain Cost breakup Capital Expenditure Costs Construction cost Rs. 300-350 per sq ft. Cooling Equipment Rs. 18,000-20,000 per MT Power Consumption 3.5 KW per MT Diesel Generator Rs. 50-80 lakhs Forklifts Rs. 4-7 lakhs Pallets Rs. 500 Reefer Trucks Rs. 25-30 lakhs for 9-13 tonnes Source: Anderson Consulting Report on cold chain
  • 51. Cold Chain Cost breakup Office + Logistics Costs Communication System Rs. 8-10 lakhs (VSAT Links) Office infrastructure Rs. 50-60 lakhs Computing Power Rs. 5 lakhs Website Design Rs. 1-2 Lakh Working capital Rs. 3 crores Blanket Costs Rs. 50,000-52,000 per MT + reefer ( Excluding civil constr.) vehicles Source: Anderson Consulting Report on cold chain
  • 52. Drivers • Growth in organized retail Reliance, future, bharti- walmart, etc. • Growth in processed food sector $ 70 bn in 2010. Projected growth to $ 150bn by 2015 • Changing consumption pattern • Increase in consumption levels 22 million MT supply against 31 million MT demand • Government Initiatives Mega food parks, Subsidies
  • 53. Challenges • Lack of Road Infrastructure • Continuity of the cold supply chain • Uneven distribution of cold chains • High capital investment -Rs.80-90/sq.ft.($ 1.6-2.0) against Rs.30/sq.ft. ($ 0.6) in west • Power supply -17-18% power deficit -30% of total expenses against 10% in west • Management of different temperatures • Awareness and Mindsets • Error Irreversibility -Highly temperature sensitive cargo
  • 54. Government Policy & Initiatives 1. All the relevant schemes pertaining to the Cold Chain Industry have been outlined and a separate compendium has been prepared containing all these schemes. 2. A Special Purpose Vehicle has been set up for the Cold Chain Logistics 3. Setting up of National Centre for Cold Chain Development (NCCD). NCCD Activities are: • Training and Capacity Building • Research and Development • Building standards through International benchmarking • Interaction with National / International bodies for development of cold chain infrastructure and trade in perishable
  • 55. Government Incentives Some of these incentives are • Budget 2010-2011 proposed a concessional import duty of five per cent with full exemption from service tax to set up and expand cold chains. The proposal also included duty-free import of refrigeration unit, which is required to make refrigerated vans or trucks. It also exempted trailers and semi-trailers used in agriculture from excise duty • The Budget exempted air-conditioning equipment and refrigeration panels used in cold chain infrastructure, including conveyor belts, from excise duty. It also extended excise duty exemption to conveyor belts. • Budget 2009-2010, Government of India introduced tax benefits for companies making investments in setting up cold chain facilities • Other past incentives include access to external commercial borrowings, 100 per cent FDI and provision of up to 25 per cent project costs involved in setting up cold storage facilities provided by the Government under the Capital Investment Subsidy Scheme
  • 56. Need Gaps Lack of knowhow and trained manpower Lack of backward & forward linkages to supplement cold chain (High VDC - Variable Distribution Cost) High cost of power: Agricultural sector is offered subsidized power tariffs by the Government of India, Cold chain industry is instead subjected to industrial power tariffs.
  • 57. Need Gaps 104 million metric tons Perishable produce is transported between cities each year. Only 4 million metric tons moves via reefer mode. Optimization in reefer transport • Lack of two-way cargo movement/ back haulage • delay timely deliveries and reduce the efficient utilization of fleets.
  • 58. Need Gaps Infrastructure: Coolers, warehouses, refrigerated trucks, carriers, shopping malls and others. Needs to study the potential risks and the return on investment (RoI) Third-party logistics: • Manual- handling reduces the product quality and life. • Lack of end-to-end solutions. One can also adapt state-of-the- art techniques such as cross docking that will reduce the transit times and inventory. FP industry: The Central government allows 100% FDI in this sector.
  • 59. Need Gaps • Reefer location tracking challenges (Technology effectiveness & penetration low) • Discontinuous Energy Supply for hours (Backup power is very expensive) • Lack of 3 Party solution providers for small players. Geographical and service range expanding on project basis from big players. Logistics providers with air conditioned trucks, automatic handling equipment and trained manpower will provide end-to-end support. • Education and awareness. Low acceptance due to high costs
  • 60. Fruit and Vegetable Businesses 2 2 3 1 1 1 3 2 1 1 2 3 Chocolates 3 1 1 2 1 2 3 2 1 2 2 1 Diary 3 1 2 3 3 3 3 3 1 2 2 3 Seafood Companies 1 2 1 2 2 2 3 2 1 2 2 2 Livestock Producers 1 2 1 2 1 2 3 2 2 2 2 2 Hotels 1 3 2 1 1 3 2 2 3 2 2 3 Quick Service Restaurants 3 3 2 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 2 3 Large Format Retailers and Wholesalers 3 3 3 3 3 2 3 2 3 2 2 3 Small Retailers 1 2 2 1 1 2 1 2 2 1 1 2 Network (Geographical coverage) Temperature Range Availability Temperature & Humidity Control Tracking Methods Real time information feedback Product Security Cost Trust /Reliability of service provider Flexibility of service provider Technical Standards Compliance Regulatory Compliances Transportation Time Segmentation Matrix
  • 61. Strategy Canvas 6 5 4 3 Snowman 2 RK Foodland 1 Fresh & Healthy 0 ColdStar GATI Redsun Adani Agrifresh ColdEx
  • 62. TRENDS PPP model for supply chains • Indian cold chain business is fragmented in a big way. • Organised retailers can give a boost to the much needed supply chain logistics in the country. • More private sector investment is required in the areas of infrastructure especially in warehousing, technology, cold chain and logistics in order to harness the full potential of the Indian food processing sector Increased FDI in Multi-brand Retail on the anvil This will boost the investments in the cold chain infrastructure. Backward Integration by Large Format Retailers These companies are investing in developing their own cold- chains eg. Future Supply Chains
  • 63. TRENDS Center’s NCCD The Central government has established the National Centre for Cold Chain Development (NCCD) as an autonomous body. The NCCD has constituted the following committees: ● Technical specification and Standards Committees ● Project preparation, Appraisal and Project Certification Committee ● Training and HRD Committee ● R&D Committee ● Test Laboratory and Product Certification Committee ● Application of Non-conventional Energy Sources in Cold Chain Infrastructure. ● The establishment of cold chain is being supported through programmes of NHM, NHB, APEDA and Ministry of Food Processing Industries.
  • 65. reefers Shipping lines Maersk Line, Evergreen Line, Hamburg Sud, Hapag-Lloyd, K Line, Mac Andrews, MISC, CSAV-Norasia, Rickmers Line, Safmarine,Yang Ming Line, UASC and Zim Line. India’s state-owned shipping company Shipping Corp. of India, is also a member. Source: http://www.livemint.com/2007/09/18020040/ Shipping-refrigerated-cargo-fr.html

Notas del editor

  1. title
  2. Content of what all we are going to present
  3. What is logistics and then coming down to cold chain logistics.
  4. History from consumer’s point of view. How were fruits, veggies meats and drugs transported in the past maintaining the constant temperature.Along with breakthroughs.
  5. History from consumer’s point of view. How were fruits, veggies meats and drugs transported in the past maintaining the constant temperature.Along with breakthroughs.
  6. Coming to current global scenario.