Last month, I worked on a story on tender coconuts for the magazine I work for. It was an idea that came to me in March when I was drinking tender coconut water, as I often do, at one of the street-side retailer near my office. The final outcome of all that is what I share below. The story talks of coconut orchards (or coconut groves as some would prefer to call it). To your left is a photo I clicked of one such large coconut orchard when landing at Coimbatore airport last month (when I had gone to report on Tirupur and Coimbatore for an industrial slowdown story... see the second post prior to this one). I can't say for sure whether this orchard had trees bearing tender coconuts or hard coconuts but I know that after landing at Coimbatore and heading to Tirupur by road I halted near a village to drink tender coconut water at a street-side vendor and he said it came from one of the local orchards in Coimbatore district itself.
Here is the story I wrote:
TENDERLY TOUCH
The business in one of nature's most valuable gifts has exciting dynamics.
In the hot afternoon sun of 11 April, the steady summer breeze was swaying about 180 trees in Krishna Prakash's five acres of coconut palm orchard in Mandya district in southern Karnataka. At that exact moment, a bright orange-coloured truck carrying about 6,000 tender coconuts was nearing
The truck reached Beeravunni at
In the morning the 30 retailers came to their outlets and sold 60-90 per cent of their tender coconuts by late evening. The sweltering humid heat of
BW takes a look at the business of tender coconuts in the country. Due to their concentrated populations the cities are the largest market for tender coconuts. Green coconuts of Kerala and Tamil Nadu are best suited for extracting oil while that of Karnataka are tender and has more water content.
There are 45-50 tender coconut wholesalers in
The dynamics. "The last few years have not seen much growth in income but it has been steady," says Beeravunni. "The business has been recovering from a slump two years ago when a pest attack caused extensive damage to the coconut palms in Mandya and other places." Mandya APMC's figures bear this out – 49,560 metric tonnes were transported out in 2005 while it was lower at 43,003 in 2006. It picked up only last year at 56,568 metric tonnes.
The Mandya district's hundreds of acres of coconut palm orchards not only grow the most number of tender coconuts in the country but also figure in the top growing regions in
"Nine out of every 10 trucks during December to June come from Mandya and the one remaining truck comes from Mangrol in Junagadh district in western
The water inside, however, does not spoil. "But consumers think the black-skinned ones are spoilt and don't buy them and so we shift our purchases to
Conscious tender coconut water drinkers can notice the difference in taste – the ones from Mandya are sweet and contains more of tender milky kernel (or malai) while the Mongrol ones are mildly salty and has much less malai content. It is not surprising because Mandya district in central Karnataka far away from the coast while Mongrol is right along the Porbandar coast of the
But some factors are secular in nature. A severe pest attack in 2005 and 2006 on tender coconut palms was from an airborne pest and it coconut palms across the states of Kerala, Karnataka,
Mongrol is about 1,000 kms away from
The economics. At the coconut palm orchardist's end the cost-dynamics are noteworthy. Each tree in Krishna Prakash over 180 fruit-bearing trees in his five acre orchard in Mandya yields fruit three times in the year. "In this region, one coconut palm seedling takes seven years to grow into a proper fruit-bearing tree," says Prakash. One seedling costs Rs 100. The costs an orchardist like Prakash incurs during these years are on manure (organic at times and chemical at times) and labour, and these can add up to Rs 250 per month.
The cost of fertile land would vary across states but most orchardists like Prakash own their land since the last 30-40 years at the least. "From a matured tree I get 50-70 tender coconuts in every fruitation," says Prakash. "The highest I have ever got from the local APMC agent who comes to collect the tender coconuts directly from my land is Rs 3.50 per fruit." Prakash's 180-odd trees yields fruits three times a year but there are orchardists whose trees gives yield upto six times a year.
A big-sized tender coconut costs the
The largest margins in the tender coconut business are made by the APMC agents some of whom, depending on the state and the district, are also politically connected. This is partly because they receive their APMC agent licenses from the state government. That is also the reason why no one hears the orchardists' plea with the state governments to hike the government-determined minimum prices at the various mandis. There are 15-20 agents in Maddur APMC and about 20-25 agents in Mongrol that make up for more than 75 per cent of all tender coconut trades in the country.
The relationship between APMC agents and the orchardists vary depending on size and need of the latter. If an orchardist is small having one acre or less and in need of advance money for personal expenditure or a marriage in the family then a APMC agent would pay him a lumpsum of Rs 1-10 lakh and fix in advance the rate at which he will buy future harvests of the orchardist. This rate is invariably a low rate and worse, the orchardist gets the same lower rate for 3-7 years, depending on the original agreement, even if the rate to the
The next powerful element in the business chain is the city wholesaler who also needs to have strong local contacts, some of them political or municipal, to survive in the business. They took make a neat packet from the business although the growth in income has not been much for them either in the last few years. Streetside retailers take their relevant cut too in the chain, but are generally not as well placed as the wholesalers. "Even on the hottest days when there is a rush of people to drink the tender coconut water, there is a limit to how much I can earn," says Anna, a retailer in Kandivli who, interestingly, puts 50-70 tender coconuts on his bicycle at a time and roams from area to area to sell. "The cutting of the hard nut and then fleshing out the malai takes a fixed amount of time."
The cash-flow management is interesting. At times the city wholesaler has to pay the APMC agent upfront for the produce that is loaded by the agent in the trucks. At other times credit is offered for 1-2 months and is usually a continuous rolling process. The wholesalers, in turn, collect payment from the retailers days, sometimes weeks, after a delivery.
No books of accounts are prepared except for some loose sheets of papers in which the wholesaler details the number of tender coconuts supplied to each retailer at different days. The payments made are in cash, except in the case of some wholesaler-APMC agent dealings where the wholesaler deposits cash directly in the bank account of the APMC agent. "Most of us have been in this business for around 30 years and the trust between all of us is good," says Beeravunni.
The good and the not-so-good. In the end, the tender coconut water business is among the most dynamic in the un-organised sector. It is also the only trade in fruits where the end-produce is in liquid form. The end-consumer does not have to do anything to extract the juice out of the fruit. The juice is in ready form ready to be drunk.
Tender coconut is also perhaps the only fruit that is recommended the most by nutritionists and doctors, and one of the major factors in the large consumption demand in the ailing populations of cities.
But there is a flip side. The weight of the water and the malai inside the tender coconut is less than a quarter of the weight of the outer shell. These heavy shells, in millions of quantity, go to the cities' garbage dumps and add to the problem of land requirement for those dumps. The government nor the private industry has thought it fit to manufacture from the husk of the empty tender coconut shells an end-product that can be used as soft wood.
The transportation from more than 1,000 kms away by diesel trucks also leads to a high carbon footprint. However, it is still ok if one compares the carbon footprint of other nutritious fruits that too travel thousands of kms to reach the cties.. Let's drink tender coconut water to that!
2 comments:
Congrats ! Hats off to you & your team.
An excellent Reaserch Project.
Best wishes & Blessings
atul shah
9898809898
AHMEDABAD
Thank you, Atul.
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