• Latest
  • Trending
  • All
  • NEWS
  • Business
  • Politics
  • Science
  • World
  • Lifestyle
  • Tech

“Abundant opportunities for organic top fruit”

March 18, 2022

Good progress towards year-round supply of avocados

June 27, 2022

Canning factories of Kabardino-Balkaria started processing cucumbers

June 27, 2022

Farmers of Serpukhov have grown experimental cucumbers

June 27, 2022

The sown area of ​​vegetables in Transbaikalia amounted to 132 hectares

June 27, 2022

Erenhot BCP in Mongolia Records Steady Growth in Exports of Fruits and Vegetables

June 27, 2022

Kaliningrad farmers will receive money to save jobs

June 24, 2022

Market of carrots and processed products in Russia: state, development prospects

June 24, 2022

Where do fresh cucumbers and juicy tomatoes come from for the residents of Podolsk

June 24, 2022

UP TO 54% OF VEGETABLES FOR KUZBASS ARE GOING TO BE GROWED IN FURNACES

June 24, 2022

FRUIT PARADISE

June 24, 2022

Dry cargo ship Lider Bulut with vegetables and fruits tilted more near Tuapse when trying to refloat it

June 24, 2022

Yirgalem Integrated Agro-Industrial Park secured US$2.4 mln from avocado exports

June 24, 2022
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
Monday, June 27, 2022
  • Login
Vegetables News
  • Home
  • AGROTECHNOLOGY
  • NEWS
  • Vegetables
  • Market
No Result
View All Result
Vegetables News
Home NEWS

“Abundant opportunities for organic top fruit”

by Tatyana Ivanovich
March 18, 2022
in NEWS, ORGANIC
0
491
SHARES
1.4k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

“The organic top fruit sector is generally growing,” says Harrie van de Elzen. Harrie not only cultivates but sorts and packages organic top fruit and sells these via the Dutch growers association, Biofruit. “Demand is still exceeding supply, so prices are pretty decent. People currently appreciate organic top fruit farming more than conventional cultivation,” he says.

Harrie explains this growing popularity is partly thanks to the increasing attention in the media. “There are articles about things like studies showing too many pesticides are still found on fruit. That helps; you couldn’t have better advertising.” Biofruit sells its growers’ organic apples and pears in the organic and regular retail channels and to wholesalers and exporters. For example, about half of Biofruit’s pears are exported to Scandinavia. “There’s high demand for good organic fruit,” he adds.

ADVERTISEMENT

Biofruit is open to new forms of sales, too, and recently entered into a partnership with flash delivery company Gorillas. Harrie expects the Dutch organic apple and pear stock to run out in March, which is why, in mid-February, prices were sky-high. But there will still be four months with no organic top fruit to sell. That is a pity, he notes. “That, when we have the refrigeration capacity and the knowledge to supply organic top fruit year-round if there was enough volume available.”

Minimal conversion
There are, thus, abundant opportunities for organic top fruit, Harrie says. Yet few conventional growers are switching to organic cultivation. Conventional farming is noticeably increasingly moving toward organic cultivation by banning more and more crop protection agents. The uncertainty about things like sales is an obstacle for many growers. Unnecessary so, Harrie thinks. “You can safely risk that. The first year you switch, you have to sell your crop conventionally.”

“The next two years, you can sell the fruit as transition fruit, bringing in quite good prices. And in the fourth year, the fruit’s organic,” Van de Elzen explains. Prisma Fruit is another Dutch organic fruit growers’ association. It reports that of the 2,500 fruit growers in the Netherlands, some 140 are organic. Their combined acreage of around 500 hectares is 2.5% of the total area.

And although conventional pesticides and using fertilizers are becoming less common, there are still quite a few opportunities. “There are plenty of organic fertilizers and pesticides. It just takes a bit more effort.” The fruit grower says the situation differs considerably in neighboring Germany. There, some eight to ten percent of top fruit growers are converting from conventional to organic cultivation. So, Biofruit exports little to Germany.

As conventional crop protection agents are increasingly being scrapped, Harrie expects interest in organic top fruit farming will also rise in the Netherlands. Though, he prefers to see people choosing organic fruit cultivation for ideological rather than economic reasons. “After all, organic cultivation also has strictly monitored restrictions.” Which is a good thing, says Harrie, who advocates clamping down on reported violations. “If you want to farm organically and get a good price, you have to stick to the rules. If you don’t, you should be ousted.”

Name recognition is a hurdle
Organic top fruit growers mostly cultivate robust, good disease-resistant apple and pear varieties. So, not the well-known Elstar or Conference. The general public is less, or not, familiar with these organic varieties. And that can sometimes be a disadvantage, notes Harrie. Besides flavor, name recognition is critical. “That’s missing with organic varieties, which sometimes hinders sales,” admits Van de Elzen.

These organic, disease-resistant varieties taste just as good as their conventional counterparts. Harrie’s Dalinco apple is proof of that. In 2012, it was voted the Best Apple of the Netherlands by a jury and the public. Nonetheless, he expects using robust, resistant varieties to generally increase due to the pesticide ban in conventional cultivation. That will boost the organic varieties’ name recognition.

Sales boost
Harrie thinks the largest impetus for sales will be the availability of inexpensive organic fruit and vegetables. He looks to the government for this and believes they must reduce the VAT rate for organic produce to zero percent. Sales also, of course, depend on availability, which was somewhat limited because of the latest growing season.

“Things went wrong all over, with crop failures in Italy and Poland, so there’s less fruit, and prices are high.” That could be completely different next year. “Europe might well be bursting with top fruit in the coming growing season. For once, nothing might happen, and we could plow through winter and spring without any issues. Then, naturally, there’ll be plenty of fruit. I don’t know if we can maintain the current prices then,” Harrie concludes.

Harry van den Elzen
Biofruit
T+31 (0)6 20427388 
harrie@biofruit.info
www.biofruit.info 

Tags: opportunitiesOrganic
Share196Tweet123Share49

Tatyana Ivanovich

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest

Produce grower-shipper Tanimura & Antle surpasses 4,000 employee vaccinations

March 28, 2021

Situation with potato seeds in Russia is catastrophic

February 19, 2022

Tomato Days Turkey

February 1, 2022

Produce grower-shipper Tanimura & Antle surpasses 4,000 employee vaccinations

16602

Trabotyx receives 460.000 euro in funding to bring its farming robot to market

8012

Hazera. Growing solutions for you

4846

Good progress towards year-round supply of avocados

June 27, 2022

Canning factories of Kabardino-Balkaria started processing cucumbers

June 27, 2022

Farmers of Serpukhov have grown experimental cucumbers

June 27, 2022

Copyright © 20122 Vegetables News

Navigate Site

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • AGROTECHNOLOGY
  • NEWS
  • Vegetables
  • Market
  • Login

Copyright © 20122 Vegetables News

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In