primary

Supply Chain Resilience

for Raising of sheep and goats (ISIC 0144)

Industry Fit
8/10

High dependence on biological inputs and global animal health standards makes supply chain disruption an existential risk, justifying high scores for resilience-focused strategies.

Strategy Package · Operational Efficiency

Combine to map value flows, find cost reduction opportunities, and build resilience.

Why This Strategy Applies

Developing the capacity to recover quickly from supply chain disruptions, often through diversification of suppliers, buffer inventory, and near-shoring.

GTIAS pillars this strategy draws on — and this industry's average score per pillar

LI Logistics, Infrastructure & Energy
FR Finance & Risk
SC Standards, Compliance & Controls

These pillar scores reflect Raising of sheep and goats's structural characteristics. Higher scores indicate greater complexity or risk — see the full scorecard for all 81 attributes.

Strategic Overview

Supply chain resilience in the sheep and goat sector is primarily dictated by biological and sanitary constraints. Given the industry's vulnerability to zoonotic diseases and volatile feed prices, building a robust supply chain requires shifting away from just-in-time delivery to a model that emphasizes buffer stocks for critical inputs like veterinary medicines and supplemental forage.

3 strategic insights for this industry

1

Biological Buffer Stocking

Establishment of strategic, climate-controlled inventories for essential vaccines (e.g., FMD or PPR vaccines) to circumvent global logistical bottlenecks.

2

Geographic Feed Diversification

Mitigating drought-related feed price volatility by hedging procurement across diverse regional geographies and alternative forage sources.

3

Traceability as Risk Mitigation

Implementing blockchain or digitized EID (Electronic Identification) to ensure herd health visibility, critical for maintaining trade access during disease outbreaks.

Prioritized actions for this industry

high Priority

Decentralized Vaccine Storage

Reduces dependency on central cold-chain hubs that are prone to power and logistics failure.

Addresses Challenges
medium Priority

Local Forage Banking

Reduces exposure to global price shocks in cereal/grain markets.

Addresses Challenges

From quick wins to long-term transformation

Quick Wins (0-3 months)
  • Digitization of health records to meet export compliance
Medium Term (3-12 months)
  • Establishment of local, private storage facilities for essential vet supplies
Long Term (1-3 years)
  • Vertical integration of feed sources to stabilize input quality and price
Common Pitfalls
  • Over-investing in inventory that risks expiration/waste

Measuring strategic progress

Metric Description Target Benchmark
Input Buffer Coverage Days of essential vaccine coverage held on-site. 90 days
About this analysis

This page applies the Supply Chain Resilience framework to the Raising of sheep and goats industry (ISIC 0144). Scores are derived from the GTIAS system — 81 attributes rated 0–5 across 11 strategic pillars — which quantifies structural conditions, risk exposure, and market dynamics at the industry level. Strategic recommendations follow directly from the attribute profile; they are not generic advice.

81 attributes scored 11 strategic pillars 0–5 scoring scale ISIC 0144 Analysed Mar 2026

Reference this page

Cite This Page

If you reference this data in an article, report, or research paper, please use one of the formats below. A link back to the source is always appreciated.

APA 7th

Strategy for Industry. (2026). Raising of sheep and goats — Supply Chain Resilience Analysis. https://strategyforindustry.com/industry/raising-of-sheep-and-goats/supply-chain-resilience/

Press & media enquiries →