Cold Chain for Ocean Communities

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Title: Cold Chain for Ocean Communities: A Playbook for Project Developers and Investors

Introduction

The Playbook provides a practical and comprehensive guide for designing, financing and operating cold chain solutions to help projects be commercially viable and sustainable. It emphasizes that cold chain projects need to be founded in both the local context but also the full fishery ecosystem, from resource availability and climate resilience to global market dynamics, (community) governance and long-term operational capacity.

The full Cold Chains for Ocean Communities Playbook is published by WWF and is available on the WWF website as well as a downloadable PDF attached below. The pages that follow present a structured summary of the Playbook for broader sharing on Energypedia, designed as a useful resource for project developers, investors, and partners working on fishery cold chain investments in the Southwest Indian Ocean region.

Why this Playbook

Coastal communities across the South West Indian Ocean (SWIO) region rely heavily on fisheries for both food security and income generation. However, weak post-harvest infrastructure continues to erode sector value, with an estimated 35% of global fish production lost or wasted across handling, transport, and storage stages, disproportionately impacting developing markets (FAO, 2020). Regional fish demand is growing while supply lags, and per capita consumption is projected to fall as population growth outpaces production. Cold chain infrastructure that is well designed and well operated reduces these losses, extends shelf life, raises prices, and opens higher-value markets. Past investments in the region have nonetheless underperformed for the same recurring reasons, namely weak business cases, poor governance, absent market linkages, technology unsuited to local conditions, and maintenance arrangements that lead to stranded assets at the first failure. Each is preventable, and we help this Playbook helps developers avoid these common pit falls.

Who this is for

The primary audience are entrepreneurs and development agencies. The guidance is equally relevant to banks and investors, government institutions, NGOs, cooperatives, beach management units, research organizations, and technology providers. The Playbook focuses on small-to-medium scale community fishery projects centered on captured fisheries. Many approaches apply equally to aquaculture investments.

VISUAL PLACEHOLDER: Structure of the Playbook


The Playbook is organized into three modules covering eight chapters that follow the project lifecycle from site selection through intervention design to procurement and impact measurement. Most chapters are interconnected. Decisions in one chapter will reshape assumptions in others, particularly across the three chapters of Module 2 where technology, governance, and finance must be aligned.


Module 1. Viability of the geographic location

  • Chapter 1. Assessing production capacity and seasonality
  • Chapter 2. Understanding the market opportunity
  • Chapter 3. Understanding the availability of energy and water

Module 2. Intervention design

  • Chapter 4. Selecting the right cold chain technology
  • Chapter 5. Defining ownership, governance, and the operating model
  • Chapter 6. Ensuring financial viability

Module 3. Procurement and implementation guidance

  • Chapter 7. Procuring cold chain technology, installation, and ongoing maintenance
  • Chapter 8. Measuring and communicating impact
Project checklist

The checklist below serves as guidance encompassing key themes for any cold chain project. The questions provide an entry point for readers with specific concerns and enable developers to critically assess their own assumptions. Each question links directly to a chapter that explores the topic in greater depth.

Project checklist .png
Companion tools
  • Cold Chain for Ocean Communities Playbook. The full Playbook as PDF
  • Project Viability Checklist. A one-page diagnostic for screening site suitability prior to further assessing the investment opportunity
  • Template Financial Projection Tool. A simple Excel model to support in projecting future revenues and costs, to assess financial project viability and plan cashflows
  • Procurement Specifications Template. An adaptable specification document for tendering cold chain equipment
  • SWIO Procurement List. An illustrative reference list of qualified cold chain equipment suppliers operating in the region

Module 1. Viability of the geographic location

Module 1 landing page

Site viability rests on three foundational prerequisites, namely sufficient and sustainable fish supply, accessible market demand, and reliable energy and water infrastructure. These are interdependent, and weaknesses in any of them will compromise the viability of the entire investment.

VISUAL PLACEHOLDER SHOWING MODULE OVERVIEW:


Key learning outcomes


By the end of Module 1, the reader should be able to answer a single, critical question: Can the proposed site sustain commercially viable cold chain operations? The three chapters below structure this assessment. If a site fails any of the three tests, it is not suitable for cold chain investment, or only viable if specific mitigation measures are identified and agreed in advance.

Chapter 1: Production capacity and seasonality

Verifies that fish stocks, species mix, and seasonal patterns can support continuous commercial operations without driving overfishing.

Chapter 2: Market opportunity

Maps the demand side. Identifies off-takers, prices, quality and traceability requirements, and the practical realities of moving fish from landing to buyer.

Chapter 3. Energy and water

Assesses grid reliability, off-grid and hybrid feasibility, load requirements, water availability, and water quality against food-safety standards.

Tools used in this module

Project Viability Checklist: Captures the Module 1 diagnostic in a single working document and produces a go or no-go recommendation

1. Assessing production capacity and seasonality

Site viability begins with the supply side. The developer confirms that fish volumes are sufficient and consistent, that quality at landing supports the target market, and that the catch can be sustained without driving overfishing. A site that fails any of these tests is not a candidate for cold chain investment or is one only with corrective measures agreed in advance.

Production viability analysis

Produce viability confirms that catch volumes, quality, species mix, and production cycles can support continuous commercial operations. The analysis also provides critical insight into cold chain technology requirements.

Confirm average and seasonal yields.

Action: Pull catch yield data from regional fisheries databases, including WIOFish and FAO FishStatJ, and assess peak and low seasons over several years. Validate the data through landing-site visits and stakeholder interviews. Adjust historical baselines for climate change, which is reshaping habitats, stocks, and migrations across the region.

Confirm the quality of landed product.

Cold chain returns depend on landed products being intrinsically high-quality. Up to 20 to 40 percent of fish are lost or downgraded for want of cooling at vessel and landing. Storage at minus 18 degrees Celsius limits shelf life to roughly five months for fatty fish and shrimp, while minus 30 degrees Celsius extends it beyond twelve. (FAO Technical Paper 340)

Action: Assess the quality profile, species composition, and seasonal volumes either from data or primary research. Confirm whether handling and temperature control on board, at landing, and in transport already meet target-market standards. The investment will fill the specific gaps the assessment exposes.

Confirm sustainable harvest controls.

Cold chain investment changes fishing dynamics two ways. It reduces post-harvest loss, which lowers fishing pressure at any given demand. It also opens new markets and lifts prices, which raises pressure. The project will only proceed where community-level fisheries management plans are in place and enforceable.

Action: Engage marine and fisheries research institutions, including KMFRI, WIOMSA, and the relevant Regional Fisheries Management Organizations, to assess current practice and stock status. Confirm compliance with quotas, gear regulations, licensing, and marine spatial plans. Where stocks are data-deficient, link the cold chain investment to additional data collection so that reporting strengthens alongside operations.

Table 1. Factors to verify in the produce viability analysis
Factor Why it matters How to verify
Stable supply volume Annual production sustains year-round throughput at the planned cold chain. Landing-site data, fisheries statistics, monitoring at landing sites.
Stable species mix Target species composition holds across seasons rather than relying on short-lived stocks. Species composition surveys, catch monitoring.
Good baseline quality Fish arrive at landing in high-quality condition. Losses are due to absent cooling, not other failures. Visual inspection and quality grading at landing.
Sustainable fishing or aquaculture Catch and harvest stay within biologically sustainable limits, with national plans in place. Stock status assessment, review of catch limits and quotas.
Seasonality assessment

Seasonality cannot be eliminated. Peak and low seasons drive volume, prices, utilization, and cashflow. Analysing and understanding seasonality within fishery value chains is essential to accurately project volumes, which determine commercial viability.

Map seasons and durations.

Action: Review fisheries databases to identify peak and low seasons. Use the findings to set catch projections in the financial model in Chapter 6 and capacity sizing in Chapter 4. Validate secondary data through site observation and fisher consultation. Interpret the historical record against climate signals that may shift seasonal patterns going forward.

Use complementary species and uses to balance utilization.

Action: Identify species or production sites whose seasons offset the main produce. Alternate between prawns and demersal species such as snapper, for example, to lift low-season utilization. Where local food-safety regulations allow, use spare capacity for adjacent demand from dairy, vegetables, or hospitality ice. Maintain strict separation across product types.

Plan for weather and climate variability.

Action: Review meteorological data alongside catch data to analyse how weather drives operations and safety. Complement the empirical view with a survey of climate projections so that infrastructure design and revenue models stay resilient under future scenarios. Schedule maintenance into low-catch periods and plan the use of excess capacity ahead of time.

Next: Chapter 2 confirms that demand exists for the volumes and qualities Chapter 1 has now established.

2. Understanding the market opportunity