bee-keeping |
Heavy investment is needed to increase beeswax and honey production, stakeholders say. Anepa Food Production Limited managing director Anna Toroka says honey exportation requires a huge capital.
"The brand and
quality of honey I supply locally are great. Even foreigners are
impressed and would like me to export it, but the capital is a
hindrance," she told BusinessWeek.
Anepa supplies honey to local shops, supermarkets and households in wholesale and retail. According to a
Tabora honey producer, Mr Godfrey Isidori, the local market I good. He
produces 360 litres a year and sells at Sh18,000-20,000 a litre,
depending on the season. "The price is low compared with operational
costs, but it is higher in Kenya and other neighbouring countries."
He says in Kenya a
litre of honey is sold for up to Sh50,000, but he is unable to do so
because of capital and licensing difficulties. So, agents and suppliers
are the ones who benefit more since they buy honey at low prices locally
and export it.
Mr Isidori takes care of his family of 18 from honey proceed. A trade, research
and planning official with the Tanzania Trade Development Authority, Mr
John Swalo, says honey is not doing well in the international market
because it is not branded. Tanzania produces 19,000 tonnes of honey a
year, but only 137.4 tonnes are exported. The rest are consumed locally.
Mr Swalo says more than 16 nations need honey. So the market is huge. He calls on
producers to register and brand their products at the Tanzania Bureau of
Standards (TBS) for marketing internationally.
According to TBS, only few honey dealers are registered Under its five-year
programme spanning from 2013/14 to 2017/18, covering 10 regions, the
National Economic Empowerment Council (NEEC) has made headways in
facilitating the establishment of a defined honey market. Honey
collection centres have been set up and the use of a warehouse receipt
system has been promoted.
According to NEEC
executive secretary Beng'i Issa, training on better beekeeping practices
has been conducted in 28 cooperatives.
NEEC aims at
increasing honey production to 138,000 tonnes, up from the current19,000
tonnes annually. Stakeholders call on the public and private sectors to
increase efforts of promoting honey production and marketing.
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