Kidney beans have become a major agricultural export product for Kyrgyzstan, especially in the Talas Oblast region. The area under cultivation for kidney beans has increased 8-fold from 1999-2016. Talas Oblast accounts for 93-95% of Kyrgyzstan's kidney bean production and exports. The value chain for kidney beans involves farmers, collectors, commercial dealers, exporters, transport companies, and cleaning services. While the sector has helped reduce poverty and unemployment in Talas Oblast, it faces issues such as limited arable land, reliance on manual labor, lack of breeding programs, and volatile market prices. The report provides recommendations to support further developing and sustaining the kidney bean sector.
Kidney Beans Value Chain and Export Capacity in the Kyrgyz Republic
1. Kidney Beans Value Chain
and Export Capacity
in the Kyrgyz Republic
K.Tilekeyev
2. Contents
• Kidney beans in Kyrgyzstan
• Kidney beans value chain – analysis by type of
stakeholder
• Why Talas is a success story
• Issues in beans production and exports
• Conclusions and recommendations
3. Beans in Kyrgyzstan
• Kidney beans – from a
minor crop to the main
agricultural export product
• Talas Oblast is the center
of beans production and
exports (93-95%)
• Kidney beans cultivated
area increased 8 times
(1999-2016) 7
10
16 15
19 20
25
36
43 43 41 42
46
49 50
61
57 57
5
9
13 13
16 17
22
32
39 38 37
39
43
46 47
55
53 53
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
Площадьпосевазернобобовых,тыс.га
Посевная площадь зернобобовых, Кыргызстан
Посевная площадь зернобобовых, Таласская область
Areaunderlegumes,thous.hectares
Kyrgyzstan
Talas oblast
4. Beans in Talas Oblast
• Population – 244.1
thousand
• Rural population –
85%
• Poverty and
unemployment
decline
Meas.
unit
2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015
Poverty
rate
Kyrgyz Republic % 31.7 31.7 33.7 36.8 38.0 37.0 30.6 32.1
Talas Region % 43.0 33.0 42.3 50.2 39.6 23.1 19.0 21.5
Unempl.
rate
Kyrgyz Republic % 8.2 8.4 8.6 8.5 8.4 8.3 8 7.6
Talas Region % 5.4 4.9 5.1 5.0 4.1 3.7 3.9 3.3
5. Exports of Kidney Beans
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015
Export of beans,
million USD
29.6 35.1 51.8 48.2 73.0 62.0 43.7
Export of beans,
thousand tons
53.3 57 76.4 61.4 61.7 53.1 66.7
Share of beans
in total exports
of agricultural
products, %
16% 16% 20% 18% 27% 26% 26%
32
48
30 36 31 36
7
8
7
3
3
5
9
11
11 9
6
8
2
1
4
6
10
1
3
7
4
2
2
6
5
7 6
5
6
2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015
Turkey Russia Bulgaria Serbia Macedonia Other countries
6. Kidney Beans Value Chain
• Qualitative study with
elements of quantitative
methods
• Field part: November
2016 - January 2017
• Research area – Bakai-
Ata and Kara-Buura
rayons
• The sample covers all
links in the kidney
beans value chain
Farmers 40
Bean collectors 10
Resellers 10
Exporters 5
Transport companies 2
Bean cleaning workshop 3
Total 70
7. Bean Farmers
• Majority of farmers cultivate only beans
• Sources of seeds – own, neighbors, and local market
• Main kidney bean variety – white kidney bean (over 60%
of all beans) for exports to Turkey and Bulgaria
• Own and hired manual labor and mechanized works
• Factors of productivity – agricultural machinery, irrigation,
use of fertilizers and agrochemicals, (lack of) crop rotation
• Beans could be stored up to 2 years in dry place
• Beans are usually sold within 3-4 months after harvesting
• Post-harvest processing of beans – manual cleaning and
sorting; uncleaned beans are sold 2-6% cheaper
• Price volatility (price drop in 2015 and hike in 2016)
8. Farmers-Purveyors
• Some bean farmers also work as collectors/purveyors –
purchase beans from neighbors for further reselling
• Average turnover per season: 200-250 tons
• Sell to wholesale buyers (3 to 5)
• Average consignment: 20-80 tons
• Margin of a bean collector – 2-2.5% of purchase price
• Competition among purveyors is high – 5-6 of them per
village
• Many collectors look for investors to increase working
capital
9. • Commercial dealers buy beans from farmers-producers
and farmers-purveyors
• Specialization and experience of 10-15 years
• 3-10 permanent workers
• Gross margin is KGS2-6 million/year; turnover of
3,000-3,500 tons of beans per season
• One dealer covers ca. 1,000 farmers in 20 villages in 2-
3 rayons
Commercial Dealers
10. Bean Cleaning Services
• Bean cleaning workshops as a
separate value chain link
• Manual cleaning services (1
ton/day/worker) and mechanized
workshops (30 ton/day)
• Permanent staff ranges from 5 to
30 people depending on a season
• Workshop has a warehouse (100
to 8,000 m2), own transport and
equipment for cleaning and
sorting beans
11. Exporters
• Virtually all beans go for exports
• 60 companies registered, some 20 are the most active
• Most firms have been founded by Turkish
citizens/companies
• Few employees to control process and quality of beans
• Average turnover of 8-9 thousand tons of beans
• Beans are collected through dealers (10-20 agents per
firm)
• Exporter’s margin is 10-15% of purchase price
• Exporters positively assess the impact of Kyrgyzstan’s
accession to the EAEU
12. Transport Companies
• Foreign transport companies
• Exports to Russia
– Kazakh companies
– Transportation costs of USD2,000-2,400/truck
– 3-4 days
• Exports to Turkey/Europe
– Turkish companies
– Transportation costs of USD4,000-5,000/truck
– 7-8 days to Turkey and 10 days to Bulgaria
– Route via Kazakhstan, Russia and Georgia; sometimes
via Caspian Sea and Azerbaijan to Georgia and Turkey
-
13. Beans Value Chain Structure
Farmers-
producers
12.5 thousand
producers
Farmers-
purveyors
Around 1
thousand
Commercial
dealers
More than 300
centers
Exporters
ca. 20 firms
Transport
2,500-3,000
trucks
Exports of
kidney
beans, tons
Farmers - bean
producers
Farmers-
purveyors
Commercial
dealers
Bean cleaning Exporters Transport
companies
13%
Gross margin of intermediaries
- value chain participants
38%
Gross
margin
62% 3% 4% 3% 14%
65000
14. Stylized Facts on Bean Value Chain
• Fierce competition
• Informality, low level of trust and the role of family
relations
• Relatively high share of final price for farmers (above
60%)
• Capital shortages
• Low, but increasing level of mechanization
• Very basic technologies, growing demand for and almost
complete lack of supply of extension services
• Enormous productivity reserves
-
15. Why Talas and Why Talas Only?
• Availability of farmer group (Kurds) with historical
experience of beans cultivation
• Low opportunity costs at the moment of new crop
introduction
• Political support to the sector in early years of
development
• Good external markets connection due to foreign
participation
• Relatively low capital intensity of the crop
• Convenient geography for exports
• Suitable climate and soils
• Replication of Talas experience in other locations is not
going to be easy
16. Issues in Kidney Beans Sector
• No more available arable land in the region – natural
limits to extensive growth
• Smallholder producer trap – no economies of scale
• Mostly manual labor
• No national seed breeding system for kidney beans
• Plant diseases and pest/insect invasions
• Limited knowledge of farmers (fertilizers, plant
protection, cultivation techniques etc.) on the background
of high farmers’ demand
• Bean prices on the world market are volatile
• No long term planning for farmers (including climate
change scenarios)
17. Recommendations
Government
• Support service cooperatives and private sector to supply
improved seeds and fertilizers
• Analyze and prepare program to expand beans production
to other suitable regions
• Improve knowledge base in agronomy, post-harvesting,
plant protection systems accessible to bean producers
• Improve plant protection system – control and monitoring
of the quality of fertilizers, herbicides and pesticides
• R&D program for kidney beans
• Support promotion of the Kyrgyz beans to new markets
• Pay attention to child labor and gender issues in the sector
18. Farmers and farmer associations
• Develop service cooperatives and other cooperation
arrangements
• Invest into knowledge systems for farmers
Development Organizations
• Focus on extension services and R&D to support the
government and farmers
• Support campaigning for eradication of child labor and
women rights protection
Recommendations (2)
Poverty level Talas Region 43.0 (2008) – 20-21 (2013-2015) Kyrgyzstan (32% -2015)
Unemployment level Talas Region 5.4 (2008) - 3.3 (2015) Kyrgyzstan (7.6% -2015)
Legumes, including beans earlier cultivated by Kurds in Talas region for sale in Uzbekistan
Since 1995, Turkish businessmen have started to export legumes to Turkey
Since 2000, the volume of export has increased more than 8 times (15% per year)
In Talas region, beans have become a monoculture (51% of all crops in 2015)
Crop area: 50-55 thousand hectares; output – 70-80 thousand tons.
Yields: 1.7-1.8 tons/ha
Growth of crop areas has stopped increasing significantly since 2014
Yields have been decreasing: 1.9-2 tons/ha in 1999
2014 – maximum increase in prices on beans (120 KGS/kg)
Export to 21 countries
Deficit on the world market (China, Turkey, Argentina and Egypt) – bad weather and instability of production
2014-2015 – decline in prices on beans (from 70-50 to 40-30 KGS/kg)
Mass unrest of farmers; reduction in income