Collective quality construction on a territory : the case of the Protected Denomination of Origin beef “Maine-Anjou”
Abstract
The Protected Denomination of Origin (PDO) is still an unusual sign of quality in beef. The efforts provided by a group of the Maine-Anjou area breeders to obtain it constitute an innovating step. In order to stop a worrying decline of this local breed which is profitableto the main national cattle breeds in the Pays de la Loire area, these producers succeeded in getting a greater valorisation of the originalcharacteristics of their meat and the link with its “terroir” using a PDO: they succeeded on a long-term basis in interesting a network ofhypermarkets, which was looking for a better product segmentation of its butchery sections. Their partnership with a multiple retailerand an industrial processing firm should help them surpass the local agricultural professional organisations’ reluctance.
Attachments
No supporting information for this article##plugins.generic.statArticle.title##
Views: 454
Most read articles by the same author(s)
- J.F. HOCQUETTE, P. MAINSANT, J.D. DAUDIN, I. CASSAR-MALEK, D. RÉMOND, M. DOREAU, P. SANS, D. BAUCHART, J. AGABRIEL, W. VERBEKE, B. PICARD, Will meat be produced in vitro in the future? , INRAE Productions Animales: Vol. 26 No. 4 (2013)
- P. SANS , G. De FONTGUYON, V. DULAWA , Strategies of differentiation by quality on beef meat : what is the place for Limousine meat in modern retail food distribution ? , INRAE Productions Animales: Vol. 15 No. 2 (2002)
