
Camel milk turns into ‘white gold' in Tunisia thanks to science, women, and growing demand
MÉDENINE (Tunisia), June 8 — Deep in Tunisia's desert south, camels stride toward humming milking machines. Their milk is at the heart of a women-led project promising an economic lifeline for disadvantaged communities.
Spearheading this effort is 32-year-old Latifa Frifita, who launched Tunisia's first, and so far only, camel milk pasteurisation unit two years ago in Medenine.
The unit is based on research by Amel Sboui, 45, a senior biochemist at the Institute of Arid Regions, who succeeded in patenting a pasteurisation method that preserves camel milk's 'nutritional and therapeutic qualities' while extending its shelf life to two weeks.
Containing up to five times more iron than cow's milk, camel milk is non-allergenic and some studies have suggested that it has immune-boosting and anti-inflammatory properties.
Pasteurisation of camel milk is essential to bringing it to wider markets because the milk is highly perishable.
Amel Sboui, 45, a senior biochemist at the Institute of Arid Regions. — AFP pic
Sboui and her lab of ten researchers — eight of them women — also conducted clinical trials at the regional hospital which showed that consuming the milk could help diabetic patients reduce their medication doses by up to half in some cases.
Growing demand
Jobs and investment in southern Tunisia are scarce, yet entrepreneur Frifita has pinned her hopes on a product long undervalued by local herders and is working to change their minds.
At first, she said she faced many challenges when trying to convince the herders to sell milk instead of meat — a far more common commodity.
'They didn't see the point,' she said while testing a fresh sample of the milk, wearing a hairnet. 'They usually keep it for themselves or give it away for free.'
But, having built 'a relationship of trust' and with demand for the product growing, Frifita said she planned to reach further agreements with breeders.
Frifita, who holds a master's degree in food technologies, began sketching out her idea in 2016, but it was not until 2023 that she launched ChameLait with the support of the Institute, which provided her startup with premises to operate.
Today, she is happy to 'promote a local product that defines southern Tunisia', where dromedaries are a fixture of the landscape, she said.
Tunisian entrepreneur Latifa Frifita (right), 32, the founder of the startup 'Chamelait', and her sister Besma, monitor the bottling of camel milk at the headquarters of the Institute of Arid Regions in Medenine. — AFP pic
A mother of a two-year-old girl, she said she chose to 'stay and invest in her region' rather than following her sports coach husband to the Middle East.
The station in Chenchou, about 100 kilometres (60 miles) south of Medenine, also serves as a training site for herders to learn mechanised milking, which yields up to seven litres a day compared to just two litres with traditional hand milking.
Frifita now runs the business alongside two other women — one of them her older sister, Besma — producing about 500 litres of pasteurised milk per week with the aim of doubling their output within two years.
ChameLait sells its products on demand and through a dozen retail shops, starting at 12 Tunisian dinars (about RM17) per litre — double the price Frifita pays breeders.
And the demand has been growing.
Amel Sboui, a 45-year-old senior researcher at the Institute, said this was largely due to word of mouth because of 'people realising the milk's health benefits'.
'A future in Tunisia'
Beyond ChameLait and with more research needed, Sboui said he saw additional potential in freeze-dried camel milk, which could one day be sold 'as a medicine, a functional food or food supplement'.
The Institute views Frifita's business as a model enterprise.
Established under a programme by Tunisia's first president, Habib Bourguiba, the organisation aims to use scientific research to benefit the country's harshest and most neglected areas.
Medenine, with a population of a little over half a million, suffers from high levels of poverty and unemployment — 22 and 19 per cent respectively, compared to national averages of 15 and 16 per cent.
A man milks a camel at the Chenchou experimental station in the El- Hamma region of southern Tunisia. — AFP pic
These conditions have driven thousands of young people to leave, either for coastal cities or to seek opportunities abroad.
'Our primary goal, even as a research centre, is to create added value and jobs,' said Moez Louhichi, head of innovation at the Institute.
By supporting 'farmers and young entrepreneurs in promoting the region's resources, we encourage them to build their future here in Tunisia'.
Since 2010, the Institute has helped launch 80 businesses, creating between 600 and 1,000 jobs, according to Louhichi.
A major camel milk collection centre is expected to open by the end of 2025 to expand mechanised milking in the region.
Louhichi said this would help the sector grow, turning the once-overlooked commodity into southern Tunisia's 'white gold'. — AFP
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