Perilous
Times
Massive piles of Fruit and vegetables rot as hunger stalks
India
By NIRMALA GEORGE - Associated Press | AP
SOLAN, India (AP) — Sunil Sharma, a young tomato farmer in
northern India, must navigate decripit roads, corrupt policemen
and blazing heat to deliver his produce in an unrefrigerated truck
to New Delhi's wholesale vegetable market.
India is plagued by malnutrition and soaring inflation, but it's
not for lack of food. It is the world's second largest grower of
fresh produce, but loses an estimated 40 percent of its fruit and
vegetables to rot because of the kind of problems Sharma faces
every week.
During one recent journey trucking tomatoes for himself and two
other farmers to the capital, he was stuck for three days.
"Of the 350 crates of tomatoes I started out with, I could salvage
only around 150 crates. The rest had turned to pulp," a despondent
Sharma said.
Post-harvest food losses of the scale found in India are a problem
throughout the developing world and translate into lower incomes
for farmers and higher prices for consumers. Inflation is already
undermining living standards across Asia with world food prices at
record highs since December last year, according to the U.N. food
agency.
In India, home to more than a third of the world's 150 million
malnourished children younger than 5, food inflation reached
nearly 10 percent in July.
"It's criminal neglect on the part of the government to allow this
volume of wastage," says Biraj Patnaik, an adviser to India's
Supreme Court on food policy. "Just cutting back on the waste
would make such a dent in bringing down food inflation, making
food more affordable, and hence, available to poor families."
At a busy New Delhi market, shop-owner Raj Kumar polishes his
vegetables with a drop of oil on his duster. Shiny purple
eggplants, bright green beans and golden lemons beckon
middle-class shoppers.
But around the corner from Kumar's brightly lit shop lay the food
that had arrived there wilted and rotten: a heap of beans turning
gray, mushy eggplants and blight-blackened potatoes.
"I throw out vegetables every day. What can I do with them? Nobody
wants these," he said.
Savitri Debi, a housewife with two teenage children, says she is
shocked and angry at the mass of vegetables thrown away by
shopkeepers.
"Vegetable prices keep going up and up. But look at the amount
that is wasted," says Debi as she shopped for groceries. "It just
makes me so angry that every day this place has mounds of rotten
vegetables, when we can barely afford to buy potatoes."
The government, as well, has expressed horror and frustration at
the rot. It has begun work on a strategy to cut post-harvest
losses by building modern grain silos, cold storage warehouses and
setting up farmers' markets in remote areas to link vegetable
growers with retail outlets in the cities, Food Minister K.V.
Thomas told The Associated Press.
Plans are also afoot to assign special — though not refrigerated —
railway wagons to transport vegetables on a priority basis to
modern warehouses, he said.
But for Ranvir Thakur, a farmer in the agriculturally rich Solan
district of Himachal Pradesh 200 miles (320 kilometers) north of
Delhi, the government's efforts seem all too far away.
"Growing vegetables in India is a risky business," Thakur said as
he tried to find a buyer for a truckload of his almost table-ready
tomatoes and capsicums at the bustling vegetable market in Solan.
"We face the risk of vegetables rotting at every stage — whether
in the field, on the road, or in the markets," says Thakur, his
weather-beaten face grimacing as he recalls recent losses.
The fetid odor of decaying vegetables hits the visitor to the
'mandi' or wholesale market in Solan nearly a hundred meters
(yards) away from its massive gates. The mandi, the first point of
sale for local farmers, was crowded with farmers, traders,
commission agents and truckers surrounded by thickets of plastic
crates stacked atop each other in shaky towers.
Hundreds of vegetable and fruit trucks reach the wholesale market
each morning. Commission agents trawl the narrow alleys between
the crates, looking out for the best bargains. Deals are struck,
crates of vegetables— color-coded to indicate the owner— are
auctioned in a high-decibel exchange and swiftly heaved onto
trucks by a swarm of sweating musclemen.
Trader Balwant Singh says the paucity of refrigerated trucks means
that delays at state border crossings, traffic jams, or the
frequent landslides that clog hill roads can wilt and rot
vegetables.
"There are only one or two trucks, belonging to private firms,
that are refrigerated. The rest are open trucks, with tarps or
plastic sheets for cover in case it rains," Singh said. "By the
time we put up the tarps, the vegetables are soaked, and these
begin to decay when we hit the heat and humidity in the plains."
Some believe allowing supermarket giants such as Walmart, Tesco
and Carrefour to operate in India's multibillion-dollar retail
market could succeed where the government has failed. They are
keen to move in, sign contracts directly with farmers, use
refrigerated transport and storage to reduce waste and bypass the
middlemen.
Their entry so far has been blocked by government restrictions out
of fear they will wipe out millions of small grocery stores in
India. A government panel last month recommended allowing up to 51
percent foreign direct investment in multi-brand retail on
condition that at least half the investment is made in back-end
infrastructure such as cold storage chains and warehouses. A
decision by the Cabinet could take several months.
Sharma, the young tomato grower, says the vulnerability of the
farmers is exploited by road transport inspectors who demand
bribes for trucks to enter neighboring states.
"The worst is when we enter Delhi. Police and transport officials
hold up the trucks for hours at the toll gates till we pay up."
Sharma said he pays a bribe of 1,500 rupees ($33) for his truck
every time he crosses into New Delhi on his way to Azadpur Mandi,
one of Asia's biggest wholesale markets.
Spread over 90 acres in northern Delhi, Azadpur Mandi is a nerve
center of India's fruit and vegetable trade. Trucks, cars,
horse-carts and bicycle-driven carts are parked haphazardly in an
ankle-deep mix of mud and putrefying vegetables.
Heaps of produce that is overripe and unlikely to withstand
further transportation are tossed aside, crushed underfoot, or
dumped in the mandi's overflowing garbage site.
When Sharma's truck arrives, a gang of loaders surrounds it. After
a quick agreement, a trio of workers begins disgorging its
contents. It's soon evident that delays have cost Sharma heavily.
"We'll barely recover the cost of hiring the truck. Such a large
amount has spoiled," said Prem Singh, Sharma's trader at Azadpur
Mandi.