Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Greater Poland, the leading food processing location of Poland





Wielkopolska (Greater Poland) Region is one of the largest regions in Poland. Its area is comparable to an average sized European state (for example, Belgium), or a European region (for example, Brandenburg in Germany). Its population is bigger than that of Latvia and is not much smaller than the population of Ireland.


The Wielkopolska Province is conveniently situated at the junction of major European communication routes. It is at the crossroads of a major route from Berlin through Poznań, to Konin and Warsaw and on to Moscow, and from Prague through Leszno and Poznań to the Baltic Sea. Poznań Ławica airport operates both domestic and international flights. There are regular connections to London, Brussels in Belgium, Vienna in Austria, Cologne, Munich, Frankfurt/Main in Germany and Copenhagen in Denmark.


Wielkopolska has traditionally strong agricultural background. However the natural conditions are under the CEE average, but the well organized farms and the technical equipments ensures a leading role for the province in the Polish agri-business.


Grodzisk Food Park


The zone Grodzisk Industrial Zone (GSP) covers 35 hectares with full infrastructure, is situated next to the road number 32 Poznan - Zielona Gora, and situated next to the bypass of Grodzisk (district road nr 308 Kunowo - Nowy Tomysl). The park's target sector is food pocessing, represented by companies like AMPOL-SERWIS (construction), SZOK - mineral water production, INDROL - meat processing, OLE S.A. - mushrooms processing, GROBUD - windows carpentry, PAGO Sp. z o.o. - Cold Store
The town has 13,000+ inhabitants, and the supportive municipality can fullfil all the training requirements of food processing investors.

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Karcag, a low-cost and food industry focused site in Hungary


The Financial Times’ fDi Magazine ranked the Karcag-involved “Northern Great Plain Region” (Észak-Alföldi Régió) on nr.1 doing business location in Eastern Europe. The study investigated the business environment, infrastructure, current business trends and FDI strategies of competing locations.



Karcag is a little town in the center of the region, beside the nr.4 highway and 60 kms from the M35 motorway. The town has a strong food economic profile: more than thousand tons cereal is grown on 33,000 hectares (82,000 acres) agriculture land around Karcag and the 1.5 million hectares lands of the Region are the main fruit and vegetable growing area. Karcag and the Region is a leading poultry and animal husbandry location of Hungary.


Food industry-focused local education

One of the 3 local secondary schools in Karcag has a focused food processing profile: beside vocational (secondary) education, the school provides also technician (upper) trainings on this field. From 2012, the Ministry of Rural Development will take part in future development of Karcag food processing education and local talent management.

Fast start-up in Karcag Industrial Park

The Karcag Industrial Park has prepared real estate development projects: manufacturing and warehouse halls with procured building permits. Preparation includes plans and permissions, so the Park can deliver a brand new facility in 4-6 months. Beside the real estate development, Karcag Industrial Park provides interim management solutions: newcommer investors can lease experienced HR, engineering, financial etc specialists to speed up the start-up phase.

Karcag Industrial Park located by the main route nr.4, which connects Budapest and Western Europe to Ukraine and Russia. The Germany-based food retail company, REWE has the Eastern-Hungarian distribution centre in the Park. The REWE evaluated the logistic potential of Karcag Industrial Park: the nearness of suppliers and consumers.



Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Timisoara, a leading food location in Romania

The capital city of West-Romania Region has 300,000+ inhabitants, excellent natural conditions and supplier basis, good access to Western and Eastern European markets. The food processing industry is the organic part of boosting local economy.





Nagyobb térképre váltás

Timisoara was established in the 13th century in the Hungarian Kingdom. This is the historical capital of Banat Region, part of the Pannonia plain. It was the first mainland European city to be lit by electric street lamps in 1884. It was also the second European city with horse drawn trams in 1867. The Romanian christmas revolution in 1989 started here.

 source: Wikipedia



The Banat Region is a traditional agricultural area. The black soil and low water table, the continental climat (average high temp: 17 °C, average low temp: 5 °C) make this a fertile agricultural location.


The Romanian motorway and road system is not too developed, but Timisoara is very closed to the Hungarian border and to the M5 motorway. The Airport Timisoara provides access to the main European hubs from Munnich to Rome, and also has domestic flights, mainly to the capital city Bucharest.


Regarding local business environment, the city has 3 business parks. The County-owned Timisoara Industrial and Tech Park (PITT) has 11 hectares total area, and full public utility infrastructure. The 48-hectare-size Freidorf Industrial Park is managed by the City, and provides a low-cost land leasing with 49-73.5 years duration. The Log Center Timisoara has 18,000 storage and 3,700 office supply, rental fees: 4.5 €/sqm/month for storage and 7€/sqm/month for offices.


The top international FMCG investors in Timisoara are Nestlé, Kraft Foods, P&G, Danone. Smiethfield Foods has two subsidiaries in Timișoara and Timiș County: Smithfield Ferme and Smithfield Prod.

Monday, September 19, 2011

Overview of food processing locations in Eastern Europe



 



Poland, Hungary and Romania got the major food industrial investments in Central- and Eastern Europe. The strong agricultural background, the supportive public authorities and the easy access to the EU food market ensures the success of these countries.

Poland


source: wikimedia

Poland has one of the largest and strongest agriculture and food sector in Eastern Europe. The land market is highly liberalized and foreign investors are welcomed also in agriculture. This resulted an effective, market-driven development of local food business.
The leading agricultural region is Wielkopolska (Poznan) Region, west from Warsaw http://www.wielkopolska-region.pl/index.php. Although the natural conditions are under the national average, the levels of efficiency, technical equipment and farming practices make this region one of the leading locations. International food processing companies like Nestlé, Wrigley, Reemtsma invested here, appreciating the excellent agricultural background, the good transportation access to Western Europe and the large domestic market.

Hungary
source: North Great Plain Development Agency

Beside Poland, Hungary is the main target area of international food processing investments. Fifty percent of the investments in the sector came from EU investors, and 80% of the export goes to other EU countries. The good natural conditions, the effective farms, the trained labour force made it attractive for international companies like Friesland, Danone or Ferrero.
The North Great Plain (“Észak-alföld”) Region is traditionally one of the strongest agricultural areas. Industrial parks like Karcag Industrial Park www.karcagiiparipark.hu provide a large supplier basis, skilled (and unemployed) labour force and excellent transportation.

Romania




source: European Commission

Behind the two leading countries (Poland and Hungary), Romania became in recent years the most frequented location for CEE food investors. The agricultural population (3 million employees) is one of the biggest in Eastern Europe, and the 200 thousand employees in food processing industry are also meaningful. Meat, cereals and beverages are the most important product categories.
West-Romania http://www.regiuneavest.ro/en/home/ bordered by Hungary and Serbia, has a strong food business sector. Business parks like Freidorf Industrial Park in Timisoara http://www.regiuneavest.ro/en/investor-locations/public-industrial-zones/page/id/1/ are the main hosts of food processing industry, providing full range infrastructure and services.