No, Private Cold Chains Don’t Hurt Farmers – They Help Them Sell Better
India loses up to 40 percent of its fruits and vegetables after harvest, costing $8-15 billion a year and pushing food prices higher. The failure is not in farming, it is in storage and transport. Before COVID-19, cold infrastructure was scarce and narrow, mostly limited to potatoes.
Lockdowns exposed how fragile this system was. Today, private cold-chain networks built around solar packhouses, mobile pre-coolers, insulated trucks and data platforms are rewiring the farm economy. These systems extend shelf life by 3-5 days, cut spoilage by up to 25 percent at each link and raise farmgate prices by 10-20 percent.
What is misunderstood is that cooling fees do not extract value, they unlock it. A ₹2-₹3 per kilo cost can lift prices by ₹4-₹7. Cold chains do not squeeze farmers, they give them time, choice and bargaining power.
- Post-harvest loss is India’s hidden farm tax and cold chains are the only way to repeal it.
- Cooling costs are not extraction, they are investments that multiply farm income.
- Access to cold chains gives farmers control over when and where they sell, converting perishability into power.