According to www.zawya.com, Dolphin Bakery operates a fully localized bakery supply chain in the UAE, producing and delivering 165 UAE-made products daily to over 3,000 retailers across Dubai and the Northern Emirates.
Fully Integrated Domestic Operations
Dolphin Bakery’s end-to-end supply chain is entirely based within the UAE — from raw material sourcing and production to last-mile delivery. The company’s Ajman facility houses integrated manufacturing and distribution infrastructure, supported by a proprietary fleet of over 80 vehicles. This eliminates reliance on imported finished goods — a key alignment with the UAE’s National Food Security Strategy, which prioritizes reducing import dependence in essential food categories. All products reach retail shelves within hours of production, ensuring freshness and minimizing shelf-life risk. The operation employs over 300 employees, all based in the UAE, and serves four Emirates daily: Dubai, Sharjah, Ajman, and the Northern Emirates.
Culturally Tailored Product Portfolio
Dolphin Bakery’s 165-product portfolio is explicitly designed for the UAE’s multicultural population. It includes specialty baked goods developed for South Asian, African, and Filipino communities, alongside mainstream staples. This targeted development supports both dietary preferences and purchasing habits across diverse consumer segments. Retail clients span neighborhood groceries, hypermarkets (including major chains), hotel groups, and institutional cafeterias — reflecting broad-based integration into the UAE’s foodservice and retail ecosystems. According to the report, the company supplies over 3,000 clients, ranging from small independent stores to luxury hospitality operators.
Operational Control and Strategic Intent
Keeping logistics in-house enables direct control over quality, speed, and reliability — factors cited by leadership as foundational to retailer trust.
“Managing a supply chain of this complexity within a single country is a deliberate strategic choice,” said Iqbal, Operations Director at Dolphin Bakery. “Our fleet of over 80 vehicles, coordinated daily across four Emirates, gives us the kind of distribution reach that most regional producers outsource entirely.”
The company’s model stands in contrast to regional peers who rely on third-party logistics or cross-border distribution networks. Dolphin Bakery was established in 2019 and has since expanded its footprint without offshoring any core function. Its current scale — 165 SKUs, 3,000+ retail outlets, and 80+ dedicated delivery vehicles — demonstrates a replicable domestic capacity benchmark for other food manufacturers in the GCC.
Industry Context and Supply Chain Implications
The UAE imported 85% of its food as recently as 2022, according to the UAE Ministry of Climate Change and Environment — a figure the National Food Security Strategy aims to reduce to 50% by 2051. Dolphin Bakery’s fully localized model directly supports that target. Other UAE-based food producers have pursued partial localization: Almarai (Saudi-owned but UAE-operated) maintains local dairies but sources some inputs regionally; Al Islami Foods relies on halal-certified imports for certain frozen items. In contrast, Dolphin Bakery reports zero finished-goods imports. For supply chain professionals, this model highlights the feasibility — and operational demands — of achieving true domestic substitution in perishable categories: it requires capital investment in integrated facilities (Ajman-based hub), daily route optimization for 80+ vehicles, and culturally informed R&D cycles that deliver 165 distinct SKUs consistently. The company’s stated plan to accelerate investment in operational technology underscores growing industry emphasis on digital tools to sustain such high-frequency, high-variability distribution.
Source: www.zawya.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










