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  • Pages
  • Editions
01 Cover
02 Welcome Letter / Sections
03 Article & Interview Directory
04 Section 1: Introduction
05 Introduction
06 EDB Singapore Interview
07 Enterprise Singapore Interview
08 SCIC Interview
09 ASPRI Interview
10 Section 2: Ecosystem
11 Sustainability
12 Business Insights: Transformations by the Country’s Biggest Players
13 Linde Interview
14 Advario Interview
15 Behn Meyer Group Interview
16 Leschaco Interview
17 The Energy Transition
18 Two Scenarios
19 Energy Market Authority Interview
20 PacificLight Interview
21 Air Products Interview
22 Environmental Resources Management Interview
23 Talent
24 Airswift Interview
25 McKinsey & Company Interview
26 Section 3: Production
27 Petrochemicals
28 ExxonMobil Interview
29 Shell Chemicals and Products Asia Interview
30 Chevron Interview
31 Infineum Interview
32 Chemical Specialties Limited Interview
33 Circularity
34 In Search of a Sustainable Solution To Singapore's Plastics Waste
35 Mitsui Chemicals Asia Pacific Interview
36 Eastman Asia Pacific Interview
37 LyondellBasell Interview
38 Dow Interview
39 SABIC Interview
40 Specialty Chemicals
41 Business Insights: Investments in the Mobility & E-mobility Sector
42 BASF Interview
43 Henkel Interview
44 Lanxess Interview
45 Evonik Interview
46 Arkema Interview
47 Nutrition
48 Tate and Lyle Interview
49 Syngenta Interview
50 Roquette Interview
51 Nutrisource Interview
52 Fermatics Interview
53 Section 4: Supply Chain
54 Logistics
55 Maritime and Port Authority of Singapore Interview
56 Maersk Interview
57 Vopak Interview
58 Jurong Port Interview
59 Trade
60 Brenntag Specialities Interview
61 Integra Petrochemicals Interview
62 Tradeasia Interview
63 Azelis Asia Pacific Interview
64 New Asia Shipbrokers Interview
65 Section 5: Local Tribute
66 Talks with the founders of Singaporean-born traders
67 Talks with the founders of Singaporean-based advisory firms
68 Talks with executives in the shipping industry
69 Section 6: Company Profiles
70 Integra Company Profile
71 Behn Meyer Company Profile
72 Credits

Murari Rakshit, CEO,

NUTRISOURCE

“Our goal is to revolutionize the way agriculture is done in Africa.”

Could you introduce NutriSource to our international audience?

Nutrisource is based in Singapore but focuses in Sub Saharan Africa catering. Since 2020, we began our distribution business in Uganda and Kenya, and then opened Togo, Cameroon and Tanzania. Our first customized NPK fertilizer blending facility is under final stage of construction in Togo, and benefits from 40% equity ownership from the Togo government. Once in production by Sept 2022, this will run a capacity of 200,000 t/year. Next we plan to build three more factories in sub Saharan Africa to cater the nutrient deficit markets with high potential for agriculture. Altogether, NutriSource will operate in four regions of Africa, and each region will be supplied from a satellite blending plant along with import and distribution business. Our goal is to revolutionize the way agriculture is done in Africa. We are committed to reduce the nutrient loss, thus reducing green house gas emission and optimize nutrient management to best optimize the cost of agri inputs incurred by marginal farmers in Sub Saharan Africa.

What is the market gap NutriSource sets to fill?

Mainstream fertilizers face the challenge that crops cannot absorb 100% of the nutrients, with almost 70% ending up as waste in the air or soil and representing a large source of GHG emissions.

The usage pattern of fertilizers globally is divided into three classes: Mature and developed countries like Japan, the US, Canada or Europe are shifting from using chemical fertilizers to organic ones or new farming techniques. Countries like China, Brazil, Russia or India produce the majority of the world’s grains and are currently at the peak of fertilizer usage, and expected to cut down the consumption growth in the next 5-10 years. Lastly, Africa and Latin America have vast amounts of land, huge populations to feed, and a very low use of fertilizers. To increase productivity and ensure food security for Africa, fertilizers are a must, but affordability and timely supply are the biggest issues. So while there is strong global call for reduction of chemical fertilizer usage, Africa is in dire need of increased fertilizer consumption to ensure food security. To address these dual issues of increased and optimal nutrient management and availability, along with a focus on reduction of green house gas emission to promote sustainable agriculture, NutriSource is coming to the market with crop-specific, soil-specific customized NPKs to help African farmers get the best nutrients for every dollar they spend.

Could you explain the company’s business model?

Our business philosophy is grounded in four pillars: We engage with farmers, we enable them thorough technology, we enrich them with the knowledge, and we empower them with the right products.

Besides the factories, NutriSource is also developing an in-house digital platform, the FarmSanta, to bring the whole Agri value chain and farmers of sub Saharan Africa in a single digital ecosystem. This is the digital platform based on mobile app as well as web based solution with strong real time Agronomy advisory services both on field and on line through our dedicated Agronomy team that offers support on everything from pest and disease diagnosis, fertilizer usage, weather, soil testing and harvest. We also enable market access to help farmers understand local prices on real time basis – for instance, an Ivorian farmer sitting north side of the country selling cocoa to a local buying agent does not know the prices of cocoa in the port of Abidjan, so we enable that transparency on price discovery mechanism. Our main targets are small-scale, marginal farmers in Sub-Saharan Africa. When our four factories are complete, we will grow our geography from the current five markets to 17 countries, served from four clusters covering whole of sub Saharan Africa.

Could you give more details on your sustainability agenda?

At a company level, we are really committed to tackle maximum areas of the SG 17, from zero hunger, controlling our carbon footprint and gender equality. Our FarmSanta digital app will be a 100-200,000 farmers ecosystem in each country we operate in from where we can derive data analytics on crop patterns, procurement patterns, or usage patterns. This becomes an agriculture marketing space that attracts NGOs, donor organizations, other agri service providers or microfinance companies. Already two entities, one focusing on clean water, and the other offering microfinancing for women farmers, have connected into this farmer base. Overall we strongly believe that sustainability is key for securing the food value chain and collaboration within the whole agri value chain is essential, rather than working individually within the box.

Do you have a final message?

Food security is absolutely imminent and it should be our main priority everywhere. Covid led to major disruptions in the food supply particularly for Sub-Saharan Africa which depends on imports. Technology, married with real time knowledge along with affordable input supply are central to secure a sustainable food supply, and together they define the roadmap for the success of future agriculture and healthy living.

Next:

Interview: Fermatics