From the Farm to the Tourist’s Table : A Study of Fresh Produce Demand from Fiji’s Hotels and Resorts

The International Finance Corporation (IFC), in partnership with the Fiji Ministry of Agriculture (MoA) and the Fiji Ministry of Industry, Trade, and Tourism (MITT), conducted a study of the sourcing of imported and local fresh produce by Fiji’s ho...

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Main Author: International Finance Corporation
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: International Finance Corporation, Suva, Fiji 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/132791540532813264/From-the-Farm-to-the-Tourist-s-Table-A-Study-of-Fresh-Produce-Demand-from-Fiji-s-Hotels-and-Resorts
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/30942
id okr-10986-30942
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-309422021-05-25T09:19:43Z From the Farm to the Tourist’s Table : A Study of Fresh Produce Demand from Fiji’s Hotels and Resorts International Finance Corporation TOURISM INDUSTRY AGRICULTURE VEGETABLES FRUIT FOOD AND BEVERAGE INDUSTRY FRESH PRODUCE The International Finance Corporation (IFC), in partnership with the Fiji Ministry of Agriculture (MoA) and the Fiji Ministry of Industry, Trade, and Tourism (MITT), conducted a study of the sourcing of imported and local fresh produce by Fiji’s hotel sector. The study analyzes the purchasing patterns of Fiji’s hotels, to better understand existing linkages between the tourism and agriculture sectors, and to identify opportunities to improve these linkages. This report covers Fiji’s main tourism areas of Nadi, Lautoka, the Mamanuca and Yasawa Islands, Denarau, and the Coral Coast that are home to 74 percent of all bed places. The report estimates the demand for vegetables, fruits, meats, seafood, dairy, herbs, and juice products across hotels in Fiji’s main tourism areas. Based on this demand estimate, as well as on feedback from specialists working in the sector and qualitative interviews with hotel chefs, owners, and purchasing managers, the report identifies specific fresh produce items that have potential for import replacement by local agricultural producers. The results and recommendations in this report can be used by the Fijian Government, farmers and suppliers, donor and development partners, hotels, and the broader agricultural industry to develop, fund, and implement the policies and practices required to increase economic linkages between tourism operators and farmers. 2018-12-04T19:57:02Z 2018-12-04T19:57:02Z 2018-07 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/132791540532813264/From-the-Farm-to-the-Tourist-s-Table-A-Study-of-Fresh-Produce-Demand-from-Fiji-s-Hotels-and-Resorts http://hdl.handle.net/10986/30942 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo International Finance Corporation International Finance Corporation, Suva, Fiji Economic & Sector Work Economic & Sector Work :: Commodities Study East Asia and Pacific Fiji
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic TOURISM INDUSTRY
AGRICULTURE
VEGETABLES
FRUIT
FOOD AND BEVERAGE INDUSTRY
FRESH PRODUCE
spellingShingle TOURISM INDUSTRY
AGRICULTURE
VEGETABLES
FRUIT
FOOD AND BEVERAGE INDUSTRY
FRESH PRODUCE
International Finance Corporation
From the Farm to the Tourist’s Table : A Study of Fresh Produce Demand from Fiji’s Hotels and Resorts
geographic_facet East Asia and Pacific
Fiji
description The International Finance Corporation (IFC), in partnership with the Fiji Ministry of Agriculture (MoA) and the Fiji Ministry of Industry, Trade, and Tourism (MITT), conducted a study of the sourcing of imported and local fresh produce by Fiji’s hotel sector. The study analyzes the purchasing patterns of Fiji’s hotels, to better understand existing linkages between the tourism and agriculture sectors, and to identify opportunities to improve these linkages. This report covers Fiji’s main tourism areas of Nadi, Lautoka, the Mamanuca and Yasawa Islands, Denarau, and the Coral Coast that are home to 74 percent of all bed places. The report estimates the demand for vegetables, fruits, meats, seafood, dairy, herbs, and juice products across hotels in Fiji’s main tourism areas. Based on this demand estimate, as well as on feedback from specialists working in the sector and qualitative interviews with hotel chefs, owners, and purchasing managers, the report identifies specific fresh produce items that have potential for import replacement by local agricultural producers. The results and recommendations in this report can be used by the Fijian Government, farmers and suppliers, donor and development partners, hotels, and the broader agricultural industry to develop, fund, and implement the policies and practices required to increase economic linkages between tourism operators and farmers.
format Report
author International Finance Corporation
author_facet International Finance Corporation
author_sort International Finance Corporation
title From the Farm to the Tourist’s Table : A Study of Fresh Produce Demand from Fiji’s Hotels and Resorts
title_short From the Farm to the Tourist’s Table : A Study of Fresh Produce Demand from Fiji’s Hotels and Resorts
title_full From the Farm to the Tourist’s Table : A Study of Fresh Produce Demand from Fiji’s Hotels and Resorts
title_fullStr From the Farm to the Tourist’s Table : A Study of Fresh Produce Demand from Fiji’s Hotels and Resorts
title_full_unstemmed From the Farm to the Tourist’s Table : A Study of Fresh Produce Demand from Fiji’s Hotels and Resorts
title_sort from the farm to the tourist’s table : a study of fresh produce demand from fiji’s hotels and resorts
publisher International Finance Corporation, Suva, Fiji
publishDate 2018
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/132791540532813264/From-the-Farm-to-the-Tourist-s-Table-A-Study-of-Fresh-Produce-Demand-from-Fiji-s-Hotels-and-Resorts
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/30942
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