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Jacques Guironnet, de ASPA2 (Francia): «Este año, nuestro espárrago es especialmente dulce» porFreshPlaza

Jacques Guironnet, de ASPA2 (Francia):

«Este año, nuestro espárrago es especialmente dulce»

Un año más, los primeros espárragos blancos de ASPA2, con sede en Indre y Loira, marcan el inicio de la campaña francesa. Para Jacques Guironnet, responsable de la empresa, la comercialización comenzó hace unos diez días. Este adelanto no es casual, sino que se debe a la red de calefacción «que no emite CO₂ ni otros gases de efecto invernadero», lo que convierte a la empresa no solo en la primera del mercado francés, sino también en una de las primeras del mercado europeo. «Es este calentamiento el que confiere a nuestros espárragos una calidad extremadamente regular», tanto visual como gustativamente, «con muy poca fibra y sin amargor. Al espárrago no le gustan las variaciones de temperatura». Y este año «el contenido de azúcar es especialmente elevado. ¿Por qué razón? La planta debe de haber acumulado muy buenas reservas durante la fase de desarrollo vegetativo».

Una campaña similar a la del año pasado
En lo que respecta al mercado, ASPA2 va a disfrutar de otro buen año de comercialización, a pesar de «una subida muy ligera de los precios. Algunos incidentes en Rungis nos han afectado un poco», explica Jacques, refiriéndose a la nevada de la semana anterior, que redujo el número de visitantes y dificultó el transporte de la mercancía, «pero nada demasiado grave y todo ha vuelto a la normalidad». Para la empresa, que exporta a Asia, muy aficionada a los espárragos franceses, las perspectivas son prometedoras, «como en 2023».

Para más información:
Jacques Guironnet
ASPA2
Tel.: +33 (0)2 47 58 95 93
info@aspa2.fr
www.aspa2.fr

 

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The asparagus season began well, but drenched fall makes greenhouse continuation uncertain by FreshPlaza

Will Teeuwen (Teboza):

«The asparagus season began well, but drenched fall makes greenhouse continuation uncertain»

On Tuesday, January 23, the Teboza sales team harvested its first Dutch greenhouse asparagus. «Although we’re involved with asparagus all year round, this is always very special for us. These are still tiny quantities, but that will increase from today. The season should then get properly going,» begins Will Teeuwen.

«The greenhouse asparagus’ prospects look excellent. It seems the cold’s a thing of the past, and the weather’s fairly mild now, so growth will be unhindered. The first asparagus are usually reserved for distribution to greengrocers and the food service and hospitality sectors. We started supplying the retail sector around week 11.»

Submerged asparagus roots
The greenhouse crop continuation is, however, uncertain. «At this time of year, we normally have the beds ready and the foils on. But because of the wet fall, almost nothing is prepared anywhere in the Netherlands for the 2024 harvest season. We had two months of rain and couldn’t even set foot on the land. We’ll have to start preparations next week. Otherwise, the heated cultivation is at risk, too,» says Will.

«We must begin heating the asparagus in late January, early February; else it will be too late. All these weather extremes do worry me. The wet weather means the asparagus’ roots have been submerged for two months. Whether that negatively affects the number of harvested kilos per hectare remains to be seen. Growers expect it will, but we’ve never experienced such a situation, so the impact is still a genuine unknown.»

The Dutch asparagus-growing area is under some pressure. «If it’s not the number of hectares, it’s the quality coming from those hectares. The strange weather has caused many plots to deteriorate again. The Netherlands, Germany, Belgium, and Northern France have equally great challenges,» Will explains.

«Yet, in a country like Spain, where we grow green asparagus, the drought has a big influence. Actually, in no country is everything going to plan, which will undoubtedly affect the product supply,» Will expects.

In Spain, Teboza is growing quite well and should double its acreage within two years. The grower has also recently expanded considerably in Belgium to supply the local market. Last but not least, Teboza has a partner in Italy, where it sources early white asparagus from weeks 9 to 18.

More overseas demand every year
«Sales-wise, I don’t expect any obstacles this year. Rather, it will be a matter of delivering the requested volumes. A recent trend is that we’re getting fewer peak harvests and, so, less oversupply and price pressure. It should be the same this season unless we suddenly get temperatures of 25°C between April and May. But typically, it’s primarily a matter of delivering the available volumes and crop.»

«If increased supply demands extra promotions, we’ll have to consider that at that moment. Teboza is quite broadly oriented regarding marketing. Retail is our largest branch, but we’re well represented within the trade and food service, too. Plus, overseas demand increases annually. The irregular supply means there’s more interest in the Dutch product. Because we’re so widely represented, we can anticipate market demand timeously,» Will points out.

That does not mean the grower has no challenges. «Minimum wages have risen considerably. And labor accounts for more than half our kilo cost price. Few vegetable crops have such a high share. We’re thus investing heavily in other growing methods and automation to keep the cost price under control.»

«The minimum wage increase means we must pay our workers over €2 per hour more. We’re doing everything we can to make our cultivation more efficient, but we can’t do magic, so customers will have to go along with that; otherwise, costs will genuinely skyrocket,» concludes Will.

Teboza will be at Fruit Logistica, Hall 3.2 – B-22

For more information:
Teboza BV
Zandberg 14B, 5988 NW
Helden, the Netherlands
Tel.: +31 (0) 773 071 444
verkoop@teboza.nl

Baisse de l’offre d’asperges blanches et vertes au Pérou et au Méxique par FreshPlaza

Le Pérou et le Mexique confrontés à une offre d’asperge plus faible

El Niño a provoqué une baisse de l’approvisionnement en asperges en provenance du Pérou cette saison. Habituellement, l’offre péruvienne atteint son pic à cette période de l’année. « Mais, les volumes ont été plus légers que d’habitude car El Niño a affecté les fougères pendant l’été », déclare Walter Yager d’Alpine Fresh. Les approvisionnements ont diminué d’environ 30 %, et on s’attend à ce qu’il faille attendre l’été 2024 pour que les approvisionnements reviennent à la normale. Avec le Pérou représentant environ 50 % du programme d’asperges d’Alpine Fresh, c’est un pays d’approvisionnement extrêmement important. Le Pérou est également le deuxième plus grand producteur d’asperges au monde, derrière la Chine.

En plus du Pérou, Alpine Fresh importe également du Mexique 12 mois par an. Cependant, l’approvisionnement en provenance du Mexique, le troisième plus grand producteur d’asperges au monde, est également difficile cet hiver. « Les problèmes d’approvisionnement au Mexique ont aggravé le problème de disponibilité », a déclaré Yager. « Cela montre combien il est important de s’approvisionner dans les deux pays. »

En conséquence des problèmes d’approvisionnement au Pérou et au Mexique, les prix ont été historiquement élevés. « Nous espérons qu’avec un El Niño prévu d’être plus léger l’année prochaine, les approvisionnements peuvent revenir à la normale, afin que nous puissions développer la catégorie. »

Pour plus d’informations :
Walter Yager
Alpine Fresh
wyager@alpinefresh.com
www.alpinefresh.com
L

Both Peru and Mexico faced with low asparagus supply by FreshPlaza

Both Peru and Mexico faced with low asparagus supply

El Niño has caused a drop in asparagus supply from Peru this season.

Usually, Peruvian supply peaks around this time of year. “However, volumes have been lighter than normal as El Niño affected the ferns over the summer,” says Walter Yager with Alpine Fresh.

Supplies are off by about 30 percent, and it is expected to take until summer 2024 for supplies to return to normal. With Peru representing about 50 percent of Alpine Fresh’s asparagus program, it is an extremely important sourcing country.

Peru is also the second largest asparagus grower in the world, behind China.

In addition to Peru, Alpine Fresh also imports from Mexico 12 months a year. However, supply from Mexico, the world’s third largest asparagus grower, is challenging this winter as well. “Supply issues in Mexico have compounded the availability issue,” said Yager. “This shows how important it is to source from both countries.”

As a result of supply issues in both Peru and Mexico, pricing has been historically high. “We hope that with El Niño expected to be lighter next year, supplies can get back to normal, so we can grow the category.”

For more information:
Walter Yager
Alpine Fresh
wyager@alpinefresh.com
www.alpinefresh.com