Postharvest losses and their determinants: A challenge to creating a sustainable cooking banana value chain in Uganda

Postharvest losses (PHL) result in direct food and income losses to farmers and consumers globally. PHL reduction strategies offer unique opportunities to contribute to sustainable food systems for increased food security and farm incomes for more than 200 million food insecure people in sub-Saharan Africa. Lack of empirical information remains a major challenge to operationalization of PHL reduction strategies in many countries of the region. This paper utilizes cross-sectional data to determine the extent and factors that are influencing postharvest losses in the cooking-banana value chain in Uganda. We find that 14.9% of all the cooking bananas that are produced in Uganda suffer postharvest deterioration along the value chain (7.2% of the bananas deteriorate completely and have no residual value, while 7.7% deteriorate partially and are sold at discounted prices), mostly affecting retailers. At farm level, female headed households experience more losses than those headed by males. Household headship, household size, proportion of land allocated to banana production, and monthly banana production are the principal determinants of PHL at farm level. At retail level, such losses are mainly determined by sex of the vendor and group membership. The findings call for comprehensive and gender-responsive PHL reduction strategies.

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Main Authors: Kikulwe, Enoch Mutebi, Okurut, S., Ajambo, S., Nowakunda, K., Stoian, D., Naziri, D.
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: MDPI 2018-07
Subjects:cooking, postharvest losses, economics, food supply, bananas,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/96102
https://doi.org/10.3390/su10072381
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spelling dig-cgspace-10568-961022023-12-08T19:36:04Z Postharvest losses and their determinants: A challenge to creating a sustainable cooking banana value chain in Uganda Kikulwe, Enoch Mutebi Okurut, S. Ajambo, S. Nowakunda, K. Stoian, D. Naziri, D. cooking postharvest losses economics food supply bananas Postharvest losses (PHL) result in direct food and income losses to farmers and consumers globally. PHL reduction strategies offer unique opportunities to contribute to sustainable food systems for increased food security and farm incomes for more than 200 million food insecure people in sub-Saharan Africa. Lack of empirical information remains a major challenge to operationalization of PHL reduction strategies in many countries of the region. This paper utilizes cross-sectional data to determine the extent and factors that are influencing postharvest losses in the cooking-banana value chain in Uganda. We find that 14.9% of all the cooking bananas that are produced in Uganda suffer postharvest deterioration along the value chain (7.2% of the bananas deteriorate completely and have no residual value, while 7.7% deteriorate partially and are sold at discounted prices), mostly affecting retailers. At farm level, female headed households experience more losses than those headed by males. Household headship, household size, proportion of land allocated to banana production, and monthly banana production are the principal determinants of PHL at farm level. At retail level, such losses are mainly determined by sex of the vendor and group membership. The findings call for comprehensive and gender-responsive PHL reduction strategies. 2018-07 2018-07-10T16:14:15Z 2018-07-10T16:14:15Z Journal Article Kikulwe, E.; Okurut, S.; Ajambo, S.; Nowakunda, K.; Stoian, D.; Naziri, D. 2018. Postharvest losses and their determinants: A challenge to creating a sustainable cooking banana value chain in Uganda. Sustainability. (Switzerland). ISSN 2071-1050. 10(7):2381. 2071-1050 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/96102 https://doi.org/10.3390/su10072381 en CC-BY-4.0 Open Access 19 p. application/pdf MDPI Sustainability
institution CGIAR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cgspace
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
topic cooking
postharvest losses
economics
food supply
bananas
cooking
postharvest losses
economics
food supply
bananas
spellingShingle cooking
postharvest losses
economics
food supply
bananas
cooking
postharvest losses
economics
food supply
bananas
Kikulwe, Enoch Mutebi
Okurut, S.
Ajambo, S.
Nowakunda, K.
Stoian, D.
Naziri, D.
Postharvest losses and their determinants: A challenge to creating a sustainable cooking banana value chain in Uganda
description Postharvest losses (PHL) result in direct food and income losses to farmers and consumers globally. PHL reduction strategies offer unique opportunities to contribute to sustainable food systems for increased food security and farm incomes for more than 200 million food insecure people in sub-Saharan Africa. Lack of empirical information remains a major challenge to operationalization of PHL reduction strategies in many countries of the region. This paper utilizes cross-sectional data to determine the extent and factors that are influencing postharvest losses in the cooking-banana value chain in Uganda. We find that 14.9% of all the cooking bananas that are produced in Uganda suffer postharvest deterioration along the value chain (7.2% of the bananas deteriorate completely and have no residual value, while 7.7% deteriorate partially and are sold at discounted prices), mostly affecting retailers. At farm level, female headed households experience more losses than those headed by males. Household headship, household size, proportion of land allocated to banana production, and monthly banana production are the principal determinants of PHL at farm level. At retail level, such losses are mainly determined by sex of the vendor and group membership. The findings call for comprehensive and gender-responsive PHL reduction strategies.
format Journal Article
topic_facet cooking
postharvest losses
economics
food supply
bananas
author Kikulwe, Enoch Mutebi
Okurut, S.
Ajambo, S.
Nowakunda, K.
Stoian, D.
Naziri, D.
author_facet Kikulwe, Enoch Mutebi
Okurut, S.
Ajambo, S.
Nowakunda, K.
Stoian, D.
Naziri, D.
author_sort Kikulwe, Enoch Mutebi
title Postharvest losses and their determinants: A challenge to creating a sustainable cooking banana value chain in Uganda
title_short Postharvest losses and their determinants: A challenge to creating a sustainable cooking banana value chain in Uganda
title_full Postharvest losses and their determinants: A challenge to creating a sustainable cooking banana value chain in Uganda
title_fullStr Postharvest losses and their determinants: A challenge to creating a sustainable cooking banana value chain in Uganda
title_full_unstemmed Postharvest losses and their determinants: A challenge to creating a sustainable cooking banana value chain in Uganda
title_sort postharvest losses and their determinants: a challenge to creating a sustainable cooking banana value chain in uganda
publisher MDPI
publishDate 2018-07
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/96102
https://doi.org/10.3390/su10072381
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