A taste of migration: Penang's multi-culinary heritage - Street Food

Status
Not open for further replies.


As a historical trading port, life there has been determined by migration for hundreds of years, and ethnic Malays, Indians and Chinese live together side by side - leading to a unique mix of cultures and food.

I love this city.:banderas:


Check this out and if you are travelling a budget you will live like a king.
 
Just Business and Property hunting. There's a visa called the MM2H visa and you can purchase homes here with it.

still going through the process exporting somali agricultural products, im guessing

What do you think of the potential for the processing of sesame seeds into their respective secondary products?

What is the somali capacity for creating, processing and exporting food products?

I just don't want us to fall into the typical african trap of only exporting primary unrefined raw materials.
 
still going through the process exporting somali agricultural products, im guessing

What do you think of the potential for the processing of sesame seeds into their respective secondary products?

What is the somali capacity for creating, processing and exporting food products?

I just don't want us to fall into the typical african trap of only exporting primary unrefined raw materials.

Sesame is one the very many crops that grow in Somalia that have a high potential for growth.

Let's not derail this thread.

This place is Hoyo's Hawaii.
 
Sesame is one the very many crops that grow in Somalia that have a high potential for growth.

Let's not derail this thread.

This place is Hoyo's Hawaii.

well the question is still there waiting to be answered whenever yo have time to or if you run out of any ideas in making more threads
 
There's big potential in Sesame seed exporting. Somalia used to be 13th largest exporter in the past. The farmers can grow large quantities but have difficulty shifting them, hence it's mostly used domestically. There are brokers that connect these farmers to the exporters, but they swallow a lot of the profit and the farmers are wise to it.

If you are honest and have the right channels for export, Somali farmers from Cal Madow to south of Kismayo will throw their produce at you.
 
There's big potential in Sesame seed exporting. Somalia used to be 13th largest exporter in the past. The farmers can grow large quantities but have difficulty shifting them, hence it's mostly used domestically. There are brokers that connect these farmers to the exporters, but they swallow a lot of the profit and the farmers are wise to it.

If you are honest and have the right channels for export, Somali farmers from Cal Madow to south of Kismayo will throw their produce at you.

There's sesame mills in Somalia but they are nowhere close to the practices needed to export to Asia.

Currently the new trend is intercepting and purchasing Ethiopias landlocked Agro products from farmers. Ethiopian warehouses are filled with commodities that don't have purchase orders claimed on them.

The biggest issue in exporting somali products is our lack of WTO integration. We aren't a member of the WTO and this something the government needs to solve. Until then many products will get rerouted through Kenya, India and even stamped Ethiopian to meet international codes.

Importing on the other hand into Somalia is wide open without regulatory red tape.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Trending

Top