Mumbai-based pomegranate exporter has attracted early investors but increasing scale & securing large land leases are challenges.
Forty-year-old Mahipal Singh and his fellow farmers in Narmada district, Gujarat, didn't know much about growing pomegranates.
Till 2011, they mostly grew bananas and other fruit.
Today, Singh and others are involved in contract farming across 200 acres for a horticulture firm.
Singh said he expects a harvest of good-quality pomegranates this June-July and this could open the doors to foreign markets for him.
This could also boost the business of Mumbai-based start-up InI Farms, a horticulture firm focused on pomegranates and involved in contract farming with Singh.
With just a few organised players such as KB Exports, Freshtrop and Maha Anar in the segment and the vast export potential in western Europe and central Asia and the increasing demand in domestic markets, InI Farms is already a focus area for investors such as Ronnie Screwvala's Unilazer Ventures and venture capital fund Aavishkaar.
"It has a lot of scope for scaling up and backward and forward integration, as most of its cultivation and harvest happens in the unorganised sector," says Amit Banka, managing director, InI Farms.
For one, making ready-to-drink juices or pulp on a large scale is yet to be tapped, he adds.
Started with a 44 acre farm in Ahmednagar in Maharashtra, InI has plantations spread across 800 acres in Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh and Gujarat.
Its business is about Rs 1.6-1.7 crore (Rs 16-17 million) a month or about Rs 20 crore (Rs 200 million) a year.
In the next five years, InI aims to have plantations of 2,000 acres and add an additional fruit to its business.
It also hopes to record revenue of Rs 150 crore (Rs 1.5 billion) by then, says Pankaj Khandelwal, chairman and managing director.
Even as InI aims to tap the lucrative European market, it already has a few loyal customers in that region.
These include Netherlands-based Levarht, a supplier of fresh produce to supermarkets in that country.
"InI is among the most reliable and consistent suppliers of good quality pomegranates from India.
"The product is packaged and supplied according to the standards required by European customers," Gerbert Van Egmond of Levarht says in an emailed reply.
"Not only will InI have an opportunity to scale up production, it would also have access to adequate volumes of exportable produce to meet contracts," says Vikram Puri, chief executive of Mahindra ShubhLabh, Mahindra & Mahindra's agri-business company and India's largest exporter of table grapes to the European Union.
Puri adds InI has a major advantage -- scale.
Since pomegranates are mostly grown in central southern Maharashtra, where high humidity during the monsoon affects the crop and the problem of bacterial wilt is yet to be tackled, InI has shifted to new locations where the weather is better suited for the fruit.
"Since they are the exclusive owners of the farms, if the entire area has to be sprayed in a specific sequenceÂ…they can get the spraying done effectively," he says, adding, "Because of bacterial problems, farm gate prices of the fruit remain high, as it impacts crop yields."
Farm gate prices range from Rs 60 to Rs 80 a kg and these are sold for Rs 100-200 a kg, depending on the quality and source of the harvest.
Early years
After securing degrees from Indian Institute of Technology-Kanpur and Indian Institute of Management-Kolkata, Khandelwal had a stint with McKinsey & Co, after which he became an independent consultant.
As part of his assignment, he helped a European company acquire horticulture firm Desai Fruits and Vegetables, ending up running the company for three years as chief executive.
In September 2009, he set up InI Farms, with his wife as a partner.
He secured seed funding from Ashish Gupta, information technology entrepreneur and co-founder of Helion Ventures, and Pawan Vaish, co-founder of IBM Daksh.
"Since I had a stint of three to four years with Desai Fruits, I had a kind of soft landing," he says.
His term at Desai Fruits not only helped him sign contract farming agreements with farmers such as Singh (who dealt with Desai), it also helped him secure customers such as Levarht.
Khandelwal says the biggest challenge was to draw investors to the start-up.
"Since pomegranates require three years to come up, to sell the 10-year