Charoen Pokphand Foods

Charoen Pokphand Foods PLC
Public
Traded as SET: CPF
Industry Food and Beverage
Founded January 17, 1978 (1978-01-17)
Founder Dhanin Chearavanont
Headquarters Bangkok, Thailand
Key people
Adirek Sripratak (CEO)
Products Animal Feed, Animal Breeder,
Meat and Food
Revenue Increase426,039 million baht[1]
Increase10,562 million baht[1]
Parent Charoen Pokphand Group
Website www.cpfworldwide.com

Charoen Pokphand Foods Public Company Limited (CPF), a company of the Charoen Pokphand Group, is an agro-industrial and food conglomerate in Thailand. The greater part of the company's production base is in Thailand with some operations overseas.

The company's core businesses are livestock and aquaculture. Livestock operations include chicken broilers, chicken layers, ducks, and swine. In aquaculture, the two main marine animals are shrimp and fish.

Operations

Livestock

CPF's livestock business includes broilers, layers, swine, and ducks. Products can be divided into three main categories, animal feed, breeders, and meat and food products.

Animal feed

The company produces livestock feed in the forms of concentrate, powder and pellets for broilers, layers, swine, and ducks. The feed is distributed by more than 600 sales representatives throughout Thailand. A portion of the livestock feed is sold directly to large animal farms.

Animal breeding

The company researches and develops natural animal breeds. The goal is to obtain quality breeds that are disease-free and suited to the breeding environment in Thailand. The company produces parent stock broiler chicks, parent stock layer chicks, parent stock swine, broiler chicks, layer chicks, layers, and piglets for distribution to animal farms and domestic sales representatives.

Grandparent stock used in livestock breeding is imported from abroad to breed parent stock which are then raised on the company's farms.

Meat and food products

Products in this category can be further divided according to two types of production processes: animal farming for commercial purposes and processing and manufacture of cooked food products.

Animal farming for commercial purposes

Products from animal farming for commercial purposes include live chickens, eggs, live ducks, and live swine which are distributed to sales representatives throughout the country. The products are also distributed in surrounding local areas, to wholesalers and retailers, or to the company's processing plants or other processing plants in Thailand.

The company has offices across the country, which act as centers for technical information to farmers on how to properly raise animals to obtain fast growth as well as assistance with marketing and distribution.

The company has a support program for the farming of swine and broilers. The company selects farmers who have their own farms and farming equipment. Selected farmers receive support in the areas of animal breeds, animal feed, medication, and farming knowledge from the company. The company then undertakes to purchase all yield which meets the CPF standards.

Processing and manufacture of cooked food products

Broilers, ducks, and swine from the company's farms are brought to processing plants to be butchered into meat products according to customer specifications. The meats are packaged, frozen, and distributed as chilled and frozen meat products to wholesalers, domestic retailers, and importers in various countries. The company adds value to processed meat products by flavoring and cooking through the process of boiling, steaming, frying, baking and grilling according to customer specifications. Export products are distributed through importers in various countries in the European Union, Asia, and Japan.

Aquaculture

The aquaculture business includes mainly shrimp and some fish. The products can be classified into three main categories: animal feed, animal breeders, and meat and food products.

Animal feed

The company produces and distributes aquatic feed, with the main product being shrimp feed. Aquatic feed is produced in the forms of concentrate, powder, and pellets and distributed through sales representatives who are in shrimp farming areas throughout the country. Agricultural products such as soybean meal, fish meal, and wheat flour are used in the production of aquatic feed.

Aquatic breeders

Shrimp culture farms and hatcheries

Following the company's policy of supporting sustained growth and development in the shrimp industry, the company has developed quality shrimp fry to distribute to farmers, which will increase their opportunity to successfully farm shrimp. In 2004, the company entered into a joint venture with an American company with shrimp breeding expertise to develop shrimp fry that are suitable to for farming conditions in Thailand. The company's culture farms and hatcheries are in the shrimp farming areas in the eastern and southern regions of Thailand.

Fish culture farms and hatcheries

The company has developed fish breeds to distribute to farmers, including tabtim fish fry, developed from tilapia fish. In 2006, the company also succeeded in developing the morakot fish breed type, which was developed from basa fish.[2]

Fish food products

Products in this category can be further divided according to two types of production process: shrimp and fish farming for commercial purposes and processing and manufacture of cooked food products.

Farming for commercial purposes

"Traceability" has prompted the company to expand its shrimp farming business, resulting in fully integrated operations that produce high quality for the company's processing plants as well as other processing plants in Thailand. In the management of the company's shrimp farms, research and development and technology are applied to find ways to prevent the outbreak of disease in shrimp and farming methods, which are friendly to the environment and do not cause residue build-up. The company promotes "probiotic farming" which avoids the use of drugs and chemicals.

Processing and manufacture of cooked food products

Products derived from processing are one of the important products in the food products category of the aquaculture business. The main products are processed fresh shrimp and value-added processed shrimp, most of which are produced for export as chilled and frozen products and distributed through importers in various countries. The selling prices are also determined by agreement if the products have been manufactured according to customer specifications.

Slavery allegations

In June 2014, after a several-month-long investigation, the British newspaper The Guardian claimed that Charoen Pokphand Foods (CPF) purchases fishmeal, which it then feeds to its farmed prawns, from suppliers that own, operate, or buy from fishing boats manned with slaves. The Guardian claimed that after the slaves are bought "for as little as £250", the working conditions on those boats included forced labor with 20-hour work days, forced drug use, starvation, and executions.[3]

In July 2014, CP Foods hosted a three-day meeting to create a task force on the issue, with representatives from retailers, local government authorities, and non-governmental organisations such as Oxfam and the Environmental Justice Foundation.[4] The progress made at this meeting is difficult to ascertain, as the original newspaper, The Guardian, has not posted any additional stories and the company website's sustainability page[5] says "For the latest general update covering our approach and achievements" to read a page from December 2013, which promises "a further progress update in Q1 2014."[6]

The president and CEO of Charoen Pokphand subsequently posted a "Statement to Shareholders" vowing to purchase only from certified processing plants, only acquire product from certified Thai fisheries, and that supply chain "...fishing vessels, fishmeal processing plants...must be certified by Thailand's Labor Standard or have been audited...by an external agency (Third Party)...."[7]

In Australia, Woolworths stocks only CPF-Vietnam products and Metcash, wholesale supplier to Independent Grocers of Australia (IGA), has eliminated CPF SKUs from their inventory.[8]

Shrimp feed supply chain traceability and audit

CP Foods only produces and sells farmed shrimp, and does not own or operate any fishing vessels. The company has been working to improve the traceability of the fishmeal element of its supply chain since 2012, and broadened this to encompass a full traceability system for its farmed shrimp supply chain in 2014. As part of that process, CP Foods has significantly reduced the number of suppliers that provide fishmeal for the production of shrimp feed.

CP Foods is currently undertaking a full independent, third-party audit of its shrimp feed supply chain (all the way back to the individual fishing boats catching fish for fishmeal production), conducted by a leading international supply chain audit company. In addition, the by-product fishmeal in their shrimp feed is certified IFFO RS CoC [9] - the highest international benchmark in the sustainable usage of fishmeal.

Sustainable Shrimp Supply Chain Task Force

CP Foods is a founding member of the Shrimp Sustainable Supply Chain Task Force (SSSC), established in July 2014, which has convened food producers, international retailers, and NGO representatives to map out a holistic improvement and audit plan for the Thai shrimp industry, and to identify and agree the concrete steps and timetable to dramatically increase the sustainability and transparency of the supply chain. The key aim of CP Foods and the SSSC is to ensure that abuse of workers and damage to the maritime ecosystem in the Gulf of Thailand and Andaman Sea becomes a thing of the past, and to restore trust in this industry.

References

  1. 1 2 FOODS TO ENRICH LIFE; Annual Report 2014 (PDF). Bangkok: Charoen Pokphand Foods Public Company Limited. 2015. p. 2. Retrieved 2 September 2015.
  2. Pongvutitham, Achara (2006-12-25). "CPF tips the scales with its newly bred 'morakot' catfish". The Nation. Retrieved 2 September 2015.
  3. Hodal, Kate; Kelly, Chris; Lawrence, Felicity (2014-06-10). "Revealed: Asian slave labour producing prawns for supermarkets in US, UK". The Guardian. Retrieved 2 September 2015.
  4. Kelly, Annie (2014-07-30). "Supermarket giants in Thailand for prawn slavery talks". The Guardian. Retrieved 2 September 2015.
  5. "About us: Sustainability". Charoen Pokphand Foods PCL. Retrieved 2 September 2015.
  6. "UK Retail Partner Update; Making the Gulf of Thailand Fishery more sustainable and extending these work streams to CP Vietnam" (PDF). Charoen Pokphand Foods UK. December 2013. Retrieved 2 September 2015.
  7. Sripratak, Adirek (2015-08-14). "Charoen Pokphand Foods PCL - Statement to Stakeholders". Charoen Pokphand Foods PCL. Charoen Pokphand Foods PCL. Retrieved 2 September 2015.
  8. "Prawn Slaves". SBS. 2014-08-26. Retrieved 2 September 2015.
  9. http://www.iffo.net IFFO

External links

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