Local Sourcing in the Cabo Verde Tourism Food Supply Chain : Opportunities and Challenges

The objective of this research report is to assess the market potential for local sourcing in the Cabo Verde tourism food supply chain, with a particular emphasis on traditional sectors such as agriculture and fisheries. As tourism continues to exp...

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Main Author: World Bank Group
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/734391578411374889/Local-Sourcing-in-the-Cabo-Verde-Tourism-Food-Supply-Chain-Opportunities-and-Challenges
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/33183
id okr-10986-33183
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-331832021-05-25T09:31:37Z Local Sourcing in the Cabo Verde Tourism Food Supply Chain : Opportunities and Challenges World Bank Group CLIMATE CHANGE IMAPACT FOOD SUPPLY CHAIN TOURISM VALUE CHAIN AGRICULTURE FOOD DEMAND FISHERIES WATER SCARCITY COLD STORAGE The objective of this research report is to assess the market potential for local sourcing in the Cabo Verde tourism food supply chain, with a particular emphasis on traditional sectors such as agriculture and fisheries. As tourism continues to expand rapidly in Cabo Verde, the sector creates a growing market potential for locally sourced produce. The number of inbound tourists in the country has steadily increased from 428,000 in 2011 to 710,000 in 2018 - a 7,5 percent CAGR in the period - causing with it a rise in the direct economic contribution of travel & tourism activities to GDP, now estimated at near 20 percent. The islands of Sal and Boa Vista dominate the market, attracting together 76,4 percent of all arrivals, who visit overwhelmingly under the all-inclusive resort segment. In addition, higher average lengths of stay in these two islands imply that they account for proportionally more room nights (89,9 percent of the total bed nights) than the rest of the country. The level of linkages between the primary sector and tourism has long been a debated topic, particularly the untapped potential of additional positive spillovers and impact on poverty reduction. A World Bank study commissioned in 2013 estimated that more than 80 percent of food and beverage products consumed by all-inclusive resorts were imported. While these resorts have been decisive in pushing infrastructure development and promoting job creation, the level of linkages with local businesses is seen as being below potential. The study found that the low level of local food sourcing stemmed from a range of challenges related to sanitary and quantity standards, volumes, reliability of supply, and connectivity. Since then, very little research has sought to quantify the market potential in supplying tourism or assessing which products could be prioritized at local production level, on comparative and competitive advantages vis-à-vis imports. The methodology for this research comprised a quantitative and qualitative survey with a representative sample of large hotels in Sal and Boa Vista, in addition to in-depth follow-up interviews and desk review of pertinent data. The type of commercially sensitive information required from the surveyed participants severely undermined participation, despite guarantees of confidentiality. A substantial effort was invested in following-up, and the team was able to gather consumption data covering a small representative sample of large hotels, as well as relevant information on market characteristics and trends from the leading hotel supplier wholesalers. 2020-01-14T21:31:14Z 2020-01-14T21:31:14Z 2019-10 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/734391578411374889/Local-Sourcing-in-the-Cabo-Verde-Tourism-Food-Supply-Chain-Opportunities-and-Challenges http://hdl.handle.net/10986/33183 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work Economic & Sector Work :: Other Agricultural Study Africa Cape Verde
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic CLIMATE CHANGE IMAPACT
FOOD SUPPLY CHAIN
TOURISM
VALUE CHAIN
AGRICULTURE
FOOD DEMAND
FISHERIES
WATER SCARCITY
COLD STORAGE
spellingShingle CLIMATE CHANGE IMAPACT
FOOD SUPPLY CHAIN
TOURISM
VALUE CHAIN
AGRICULTURE
FOOD DEMAND
FISHERIES
WATER SCARCITY
COLD STORAGE
World Bank Group
Local Sourcing in the Cabo Verde Tourism Food Supply Chain : Opportunities and Challenges
geographic_facet Africa
Cape Verde
description The objective of this research report is to assess the market potential for local sourcing in the Cabo Verde tourism food supply chain, with a particular emphasis on traditional sectors such as agriculture and fisheries. As tourism continues to expand rapidly in Cabo Verde, the sector creates a growing market potential for locally sourced produce. The number of inbound tourists in the country has steadily increased from 428,000 in 2011 to 710,000 in 2018 - a 7,5 percent CAGR in the period - causing with it a rise in the direct economic contribution of travel & tourism activities to GDP, now estimated at near 20 percent. The islands of Sal and Boa Vista dominate the market, attracting together 76,4 percent of all arrivals, who visit overwhelmingly under the all-inclusive resort segment. In addition, higher average lengths of stay in these two islands imply that they account for proportionally more room nights (89,9 percent of the total bed nights) than the rest of the country. The level of linkages between the primary sector and tourism has long been a debated topic, particularly the untapped potential of additional positive spillovers and impact on poverty reduction. A World Bank study commissioned in 2013 estimated that more than 80 percent of food and beverage products consumed by all-inclusive resorts were imported. While these resorts have been decisive in pushing infrastructure development and promoting job creation, the level of linkages with local businesses is seen as being below potential. The study found that the low level of local food sourcing stemmed from a range of challenges related to sanitary and quantity standards, volumes, reliability of supply, and connectivity. Since then, very little research has sought to quantify the market potential in supplying tourism or assessing which products could be prioritized at local production level, on comparative and competitive advantages vis-à-vis imports. The methodology for this research comprised a quantitative and qualitative survey with a representative sample of large hotels in Sal and Boa Vista, in addition to in-depth follow-up interviews and desk review of pertinent data. The type of commercially sensitive information required from the surveyed participants severely undermined participation, despite guarantees of confidentiality. A substantial effort was invested in following-up, and the team was able to gather consumption data covering a small representative sample of large hotels, as well as relevant information on market characteristics and trends from the leading hotel supplier wholesalers.
format Report
author World Bank Group
author_facet World Bank Group
author_sort World Bank Group
title Local Sourcing in the Cabo Verde Tourism Food Supply Chain : Opportunities and Challenges
title_short Local Sourcing in the Cabo Verde Tourism Food Supply Chain : Opportunities and Challenges
title_full Local Sourcing in the Cabo Verde Tourism Food Supply Chain : Opportunities and Challenges
title_fullStr Local Sourcing in the Cabo Verde Tourism Food Supply Chain : Opportunities and Challenges
title_full_unstemmed Local Sourcing in the Cabo Verde Tourism Food Supply Chain : Opportunities and Challenges
title_sort local sourcing in the cabo verde tourism food supply chain : opportunities and challenges
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2020
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/734391578411374889/Local-Sourcing-in-the-Cabo-Verde-Tourism-Food-Supply-Chain-Opportunities-and-Challenges
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/33183
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