Himalaya Food International Ltd., anteriormente conocida como Himalya International Ltd., es la mayor empresa de procesamiento de alimentos congelados y enlatados de la India, fabricando una variedad de productos alimenticios, incluyendo papas fritas.
La empresa proporciona aproximadamente 1,200 empleos directos y 1,000 más a través de la agricultura contractual en países pobres. Himalaya, que es bien conocida en los Estados Unidos por su variada línea de productos, tiene dos fábricas certificadas con ISO 22000 en el norte y oeste de la India que se especializan en productos totalmente naturales y vegetarianos.
La empresa utiliza procedimientos de enfriamiento rápido, congelación y retorte sin productos químicos para preservar los nutrientes y la frescura. Su producción anual incluye 10,000 toneladas de champiñones, 25,000 toneladas de papas fritas, 9,000 toneladas de productos de papa y aperitivos, 5,000 toneladas de quesos especiales y mantequilla, y 30 millones de latas.
La empresa opera dos plantas, una en Gujarat y la otra en Himachal Pradesh.
Solapas principales
Himalaya Food International Ltd
Descripción de la compañía
Productos Ofrecidos


Tipos de productos que ofrece esta empresa
Marcas
Noticias de esta Compañia

Frequently Asked Questions
Himalaya Food operates in a space dominated by large multinational players, yet it differentiates itself through a diversified portfolio beyond potatoes, including mushrooms, dairy and canned goods. This reduces dependency on a single category and allows cross-market leverage. Additionally, its focus on vegetarian and clean-label products aligns well with growing global demand for plant-based and minimally processed foods, giving it a niche positioning rather than competing purely on scale.
Yes—but it would require a fundamental strategic shift. Currently, much of the frozen food business in India operates on B2B or private-label supply models. To become a global brand, Himalaya Food would need to invest heavily in branding, consumer trust, packaging innovation and retail partnerships. The challenge is not production—but market visibility and brand recall.
Absolutely. Backward integration through contract farming or controlled cultivation could ensure consistent quality, traceability and cost stability, especially for potatoes and mushrooms. This would also strengthen its clean-label and sustainability claims, which are increasingly important in global markets.
Yes, and this is one of its strongest untapped opportunities. Products like aloo tikki and samosa can be positioned as authentic Indian ready-to-eat snacks in international markets. Success will depend on branding, packaging and taste standardization, not just production.
Make This Page Even Better!
This content was last updated on Junio 5, 2025
Have a helpful detail to contribute? Catch something that should be corrected?









