When sourcing fresh fruit and vegetables, Ahold European Sourcing always takes quality and taste as the starting point, explains Leon Mol. He is an agronomist with Ahold European Sourcing and responsible for ensuring delivery conditions to suppliers. “Behind the quality and taste there are many uncertainties. In food safety we cover those with GlobalGap and the add-on module, ‘Albert Heijn Protocol’. We are also very attached to good working conditions with our suppliers.” In many countries outside the EU, Ahold covers those aspects with extra certification or social audits. “And we look at sustainability. This is a set of requirements that is invisible to the consumer but leads to the starting point: that the product should meet customers’ demands. We must never lose sight of quality and availability.”
Communication and trust in long term supplier relationships
Ahold is an international retail group based in the Netherlands, with strong local consumer brands in Europe and the United States. Supermarkets are their core business and Ahold is the number one retailer in the Netherlands, with 936 Albert Heijn supermarkets and a market share of 33.7 percent according to Nielsen. Supplying all those supermarkets both in the Netherlands and abroad with fresh fruit and vegetables naturally calls for a lot of programming and location is one of the focal points in this. Leon Mol: “What is available nearby will be sourced nearby. What we need to get from further away, will be sourced further away.” Distance always plays a role in the quality of fresh produce. As much as possible we source close to home, but we also need to satisfy the consumers’ need for year-round product availability. For instance, citrus is sourced as much as possible from Spain and the remainder mainly comes from South Africa. Tomatoes are sourced for most of the year from the Netherlands and the rest comes from Spain and Morocco. A differentiation in assortment is a clear trend signalled by Albert Heijn. ” We need to offer products for all our customers.” This includes the more basic products and the specialities such as limes, minneolas or a good tasting tangerine. Although developments in citrus are not so fast due to the long time it takes for a citrus tree to come into production, clear trends are visible. “One is to better secure the mainstream. It is a challenge to supply an orange all year round with good taste and good quality.” New citrus varieties are developed to smooth the transition from one citrus season to another in terms of taste and quality so that the consumer does not really notice the difference in origin throughout the year. Developments in tomatoes are much swifter, as the production time for tomato is short. Leon Mol:” With tomatoes too, the first goal is to provide continuity in quality and availability.” In this process, long-term relationships and extensive communication with suppliers play a key role. “The structural relationship with our suppliers is very important to us.” Direct contacts with the suppliers, long-term relationships and company visits are part of Ahold’s supplier policies. It is our guarantee of quality and availability and enables us to assess risks. “In addition to the certificates, trust does play a large role too. To know each other’s demands is very important.”
Exploring opportunities that lead to win-win situations
Ahold expects its suppliers to take a pro-active approach where it comes to pointing out possible issues. Among the difficulties to be tackled are delivery problems. Due to weather conditions it may happen that deliveries cannot be in time or quality cannot be provided as agreed. This may also lead to food safety issues, because extra crop protection may be needed in these situations. “The better we know these issues, the better we can allow for it when planning our inventory.” This goes for specific local production circumstances too. Such a process leads to extensive communication and intensive cooperation. “If both parties can realise that enormous progress can be made on all fronts, which may range from minimising waste to optimising production, water use or inventory management and creating a true win-win situation.” Sustainability is evidently an issue with Ahold and the topic is mainly looked at in terms of opportunities. “Our approach is not to impose rules but to see where the problems of our producers are and where progress can be made. Every product has its own story to tell.” In every situation the specific circumstances for production are taken into account. “In areas where plenty of water is available, it is no use to impose limitations on the use of water, but for instance producers in South Africa will have to deal with limitations in water use, due to its restricted availability.” Ahold’s sustainability policies are not a question of risk management but much more of exploring opportunities together with the producers in order to create a better, more efficient and more sustainable product. Profitability also plays a role in this process. “Only when a producer makes money on his products can they innovate and invest. We are careful not to make requirements that do not have a clear effect.”
Programming ahead
Knowing the needs and planning ahead to satisfy those needs is one of the leading principles for Albert Heijn. “This leads to efficiency and transparency throughout the chain.” This also means that every link in the chain is looked at critically and when it offers no added value, it has no place in the chain. The fresh produce market is a volatile one and occasionally additional purchases need to be made. Leon Mol: “Even then, we turn to trusted and well-known parties with the same requirements as the products in our programmes.” This goes for both conventional and organic products. Organic producers have become larger and more high-tech. “The organic produce sector is professionalising, so we are able to provide a more consistent organic product.” Leon Mol is convinced that over the years organic farming has had great influence on conventional farming. “Conventional farmers have watched the organic producers closely and picked out elements to improve their own production. Many products are now available where no chemical crop protection has been used. Specifically in greenhouse crops, giant steps have been taken in the use of natural solutions to combat pests.”
Changing consumer needs
Ahold signals that fresh produce is increasingly sold via internet. Expectations are that these sales will further increase. That brings a different type of challenge. “The customer will not pick out their own lettuce; instead we will do that for them. Aspects like predictability and quality have a different dimension and will require attention from different links in the chain. ” In this process, communication with the consumer is becoming even more valuable. Ahold has various ways to map the needs and requirements of the end-consumer, ranging from internet panels to feedback from the supermarkets. This information is used as input for the producers’ programmes. One definite trend is that consumers are buying their products more consciously. Origin and ingredients are important. Another trend is health. Leon Mol expects that the content of a product will become increasingly important. “We note increasing attention to nutritional values and taste, which offers fresh fruit and vegetables a very good base.”
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Bel’Orta has the widest assortment
Tomato and endive specialties are the major vegetable successes.
Bel’Orta today provides a full assortment of Belgian products since the merger with Borgloon Veiling this January, thanks to its large supply of apples, pears and strawberries. “At Saint-Katelijne, we also have a unique logistics organization with suppliers throughout the supply chain from packaging, transport and agriculture,” explains Jo Lambrecht. The organization’s trade balance for 2013 came to 350,000 tons, with over 200 items. After a very difficult year for tomatoes, Bel’Orta has decided to increase its product range of specialty varieties for 2014. “We are increasing our assortment of tomatoes” confirms Jo Lambrecht, the organization’s sales director.
“Cocktello” is the latest item for 2014. They are 35 to 40 gram loose tomatoes packed in 500 gram punnets. The largest items among Bel’Orta tomato specialties so far have been cherry and cocktail varieties, coeur-de-boeuf, San Marzano, Intense® and snacking tomatoes. Every line has a larger portfolio for 2014: San Marzano varieties now have a new packaging line and a new assortment, with 3kg boxes, 4kg Europool boxes and 6Kg boxes in one lay. The Intense® variety is supplied in 6kg boxes and also bags. Since 2013, sweet pink tomatoes have been available with the full range of round, plum, cherry and baby vine varieties, packed in 3 to 6 kg boxes or punnets. Coeur-de-boeuf are segmented into 3 sizes and delivered in 3 formats, whereas Mini Star cocktail tomatoes are packed in 4 kg boxes and also in trays with small boxes. Cherry Star vine tomatoes come in 3 kg boxes. “Tom-X” shakers are a mix of yellow, orange and red cherry tomatoes. “Pearl Tomatoes” weigh just one gram and are packed in 125 gram trays. “Vit-a-Shake” shakers contain 250 grams of cherry plum tomatoes, now available in a bucket of 500 grams. Tomarron is a beef type of tasty brown tomatoes. “Papritom” are pepper-shaped cocktail tomatoes that are deliciously sweet and available in 3 kg loose boxes.
Among the other increasingly popular specialties in the salad vegetable segment are the snack cucumbers “Donna” in mini (100 to 200 grams) and midi (150 to 250 grams) formats; the courgette de nice (round zucchini) and zucchini flowers, with 6 to 24 pieces a package; yellow courgettes, with sales improving in the category every year; “Chic’o Red” red endives; “Piccantina” truly hot peppers, ideal for chili con carne; Angello sweet peppers, sold in 100 g shakers and a 1 kg box; and multicolored rootballs of 3 types of lettuces, with bionda, rossa and red leaves, creating a unique mix and longer shelf-life. In the organic segment, Bel’Orta does not disappoint, with items in every category, even tomato specialties like cherry and baby plum. The main organic items sold are leaf and root vegetables, endives, carrots, cauliflowers, broccoli, zucchini, fennel, apples, pears and strawberries. One of Bel’Orta’s organic growers produces 60 ha of open-field organic berries with the full range of blueberries, raspberries, blackberries, kiwiberries, red and white currants, gooseberries, loganberries, tayberries and even pepino melons.
Tailored convenience items for food service
Bel’Orta also supports its specialized division in supplying the convenience sector, increasing the number of items and services. The aim is to respond to the specific needs of professionals in food service with different preparations and varieties. Among the items in most demand are sliced coeur-de-boeuf or non-dripping plum tomatoes (Intense®), easy-to-cut iceberg lettuces, stem-removed tomatoes, stemless runner beans, cleaned broccoli and cauliflower florets and Brussels sprouts, as well as a full range of fresh herbs. “We have convenience solutions for every product item we sell,” explains Jo. The success of this concept is possible thanks to specific organization in the entire supply chain. “Our convenience line requires specific variety selection by our agriculture department and the use of different packagings and logistics”.
Endives, the Belgian product
Endives are another of the Belgian group’s major product commodities, with 26 to 27 million kilos sold every year. While export markets are normally supplied with only one item, the domestic market enjoys a full range of 6 or 7 items. “We have started to promote our endive assortment abroad, too, and we have a different type for every kind of use,” explains Jo. The popular ones include the “Dik Lang” or the long, thick long product, also considered to be a premium item due to its small axis inside. There is also the “Short Thin” variety (ideal for salads), the traditional “Ground” endive, cultivated in the soil (others are hydroponic), the “Mini” endive for haute cuisine (also sold increasingly in supermarkets for cooking), the “Chic’O Red” endive (bicolor with nice purple leaves), organic endives and of course the extra class “Export” endive with its smaller axis and ideal leaf shape.
Bel’Orta: elite coeur-de-boeuf producer
Sold under the “Specialty Street” brand, coeur-de-boeuf tomatoes are one of Bel’Orta’s major specialty items in fruit and vegetables. Flanders provides ideal growing conditions with stable temperatures and fewer hot days, since this is a very sensitive variety. “Our premium quality makes us successful with exports, even in distant markets like Russia, Spain and Portugal,” says Wim Vertommen, from one of Bel’Orta’s largest growers. Planted at the end of January for long-cycle cultivation in a 1,600 m2 modern greenhouse, they are harvested from the end of March until December. “We manage to harvest 30 to 35 bouquets in the entire season.” Every piece of fruit is harvest by hand and packed in the greenhouse. The 3 items come to: 92+, 70+ and 60+. “No secondary quality is sold,” Wim points out, since all the coeur de boeuf tomatoes are marketed under Flandria brands. Wim Vertommen’s company grows a total of 6 ha. They have invested in the best growing conditions with the most modern glass greenhouses (because of the specially treated glass, more than 95% of the light passes through), biological growing techniques (with the use of auxiliary insects in cooperation with Koppert), as well as advanced, sustainable systems like full recycling of irrigation water. “Our goal is to grow the healthiest, tastiest products in the most sustainable way,” explains Wim. He selects the varieties with the best eating qualities for consumers, since all their produce is marketed under the Flandria and Bel’Orta brands. “We are also segmenting by color according to the customers’ orders: the red ones for the domestic market, the greener ones for Southern or Eastern Europe,” Wim adds.
Carrefour aims to restore consumer buying power
In 2012 and 2013, Carrefour continued its efforts to restore consumer buying power and promote sustainable development
The world number two and European number one retail distributor, Carrefour, now has 10,102 stores employing a workforce of 365,000 in 34 countries. They include 1374 hypermarkets, 3435 supermarkets, 5121 neighbourhood stores and 172 cash-and-carries. The group generates 46% of its turnover in France, 27% in Europe outside France (Belgium, Spain, Italy, Poland, Romania and Turkey), 19% in Argentina and Brazil and 8% in China, India and Taiwan. Its turnover rose by 0.9% in 2012 to reach a pre-tax figure of €76.8 billion. In the first three quarters of 2013 the company’s sales increased by a further 1.8%. In 2012 and 2013, the Carrefour group returned to focusing on countries where it is in a strong position and has a multi-format profile, strengthening its business in France, Brazil and Argentina. It also built up its drive-in business, aiming for 400 drive-ins in France by the end of 2013 and opening the first drive-ins in Belgium and Spain.
For the past two years, Carrefour has been endeavouring to give its customers back their buying power. In France, it has been selling fruit and vegetables at under €1 and has introduced a “lowest price guarantee” for one fruit, one vegetable, one meat, one fish, one meat product and one cheese a day. If the customers find them more cheaply within a 15 km radius, Carrefour gives them double the difference. In Spain, it has been concentrating on bringing down prices for 4000 fresh products for the over-65s and large families. In Greece, Carrefour Marinopoulos offers a 10% discount on fresh products for large families and for old or unemployed people.
Quality and sustainable development
Carrefour has always favoured local supplies. Over 75% of its fresh products come from local suppliers and the group wants to strengthen its ultra-local initiatives. In 2012 the group also celebrated the 20th anniversary of its EQC (Engagement Qualité Carrefour – Carrefour quality commitment) supply chains. These currently involve over 25,000 farmers around the world who make it possible for Carrefour to offer core fresh products that meet strict requirements in terms of traceability, quality, taste and authenticity. The 430 products from these supply chains include a large number of fruit and vegetables. Carrefour also offers over 2000 organic food products under its own label. Its Carrefour Bio range grows year by year, with the accent on production methods that care for the environment, partnerships with local suppliers and low prices to bring the products within everybody’s reach. As part of its organic range reorganisation, embarked on in early 2013, the group has just launched its carrefour-bio.fr online store.
Another strong theme is sustainable development. Since 2006, Carrefour has been offering its suppliers a sustainable development checklist, developed with WWF France and Ademe, covering 49 criteria regarding their sustainable development policy and management and their environmental, social and financial performance. Since 2009 at has even been organising yearly Sustainable Development Trophies that reward and highlight the exemplary steps taken by four companies. Another core theme the group has been emphasizing even more in 2013 is cutting wastefulness and waste and preserving natural resources. The Carrefour foundation spent €2 million in 2013 on food aid projects. The group has also set up a structured supply chain waste management organisation that can add value in the supply chains, making it possible to achieve recycling levels of nearly 64%, or even 81% in France. VB
Asda kicks off discount campaign
The UK-based retailer is seeking to strengthen its position as the number two supermarket and has begun its largest ever discounting campaign
Asda has come out fighting in 2014 and has pledged to slash £50m from the cost of essential food items in the first three months of the year. As part of its £1bn five-year price cutting strategy, Asda is lowering the prices across a range of categories including fresh produce and frozen foods. Prices for broccoli, tenderheart cabbage, cauliflower, iceberg lettuce and spring onions have been reduced to just 50p. The £50m price overhaul is part of a £200m investment in pricing this year and is part of Asda’s strategy to take on discount supermarkets such as Aldi and Lidl.
“It’s more clear than ever that UK shoppers’ priorities are well and truly focused on price,” says Barry Williams, Asda’s chief merchandising officer for food. “This January, we are offering more value than ever before across our stores on the products that people actually week in, week out. With hundreds of products at 50p, we’re even making the pound shops and Aldi look expensive.” The price cuts are being funded by Asda’s savings programme ‘We Operate For Less’, in addition to the price bargaining power it enjoys with parent company Walmart. Though Asda won’t realise its trading figures for the fourth quarter until late February, the retailer says it enjoyed a strong performance at Christmas, both in its stores and online. On December 23, a record 4.8 million customers passed through Asda’s stores. The UK retailer also enjoyed its biggest ever online Christmas, and grocery home shopping sales on December 21 and 22 topped £5 million (U$$8.2 million) for the first and second time.
Though other retailers such as Tesco and Morrisons struggled during the fourth quarter, Asda said it was confident the strategy it adopted for Christmas was the right one.
Asda is going on the offensive and in late 2013, it announced plans to invest £1bn in prices and £250m in improving product quality over the next five years. Convenience store formats are also on the agenda.
Furthermore, Asda is keen to strengthen its customer base in London and the south east of England, where traditionally it has been weaker. According to recent figures from Kantar Worldpanel, Asda has a 17.2 per cent market stake of the UK grocery market, compared to Tesco’s 29.8 per cent, Sainsbury’s 16.8 per cent and Morrison’s 11.5 per cent.
There are 573 Asda stores in the UK, including 318 superstores, 188 supermarkets and 32 supercentres.
Asda has been owned by Walmart since June 1999
Headquartered in Bentonville, Arkansas, Walmart is the world’s largest retailer and operates more than 11,000 stores in 27 countries around the world, employing 2.2 million associates. Approximately 1.3 million of these are in the US alone.
Walmart is the seventh largest company in the world, with a market value of US$242.5billion (£158.3 bn). The retailer enjoyed total global sales of US$496.16bn (£290.17bn) in 2012.
Walmart is working towards three aspirational sustainability goals and these aims are: to be supplied 100 per cent by renewable energy, to create zero waste and to sell products that sustain people and the environment.
Similarly to other retailers, Walmart is trying to drive down its fuel consumption and costs. As part of the project Operate for Less, Walmart Canada recently announced that it is entering the second phase of its pilot Supercube project.
The Supercube is a 60-foot, 6-inch trailer combined with a snub-nosed truck and drome box. It allows the retailer to ship up to 40 percent more merchandise compared to a standard 53-foot tractor-trailer combination.
Over the past year, Walmart Canada has made 100 deliveries using this Supercube truck, and found it reduces transportation costs by 24 percent and greenhouse emissions by 14 percent.
For the second phase of the project, Walmart Canada is making improvements to the existing truck to decrease load and unload times and has begun work to extend the Supercube fleet.
Kloosterboer pairs experience and flexibility to offer total logistic package
Logistic service provider Kloosterboer is a family business with over 85 years’ experience in treating temperature controlled cargo. The company specialises in storage, stevedoring, transport, customs and logistic IT solutions. Customer service coordinator Monica Pouwer of the Vlissingen branch cites flexibility as the key focal point in the total service package they provide. With over three million m³ / 500,000 tons of storage spread across 15 locations in both the Netherlands and abroad and more than 600 employees, Kloosterboer is one of the largest players in this segment. The branch in Vlissingen has a storage capacity of 200,000 tons, of which at least 35,000 pallets are suitable for the storage of fresh produce.
There is a container terminal with an availability of 4,500 TEU and 180 reefer plugs. Modern IT technologies provide full traceability and quality control of the products. With a strong position in the handling of conventional reefer ships, there is also a firm commitment to their container business. Monica Pouwer: “We recently reached an agreement with a number of container shipping companies including Maersk, MSC, CMA CGM, Evergreen and Hapag Lloyd to start a reefer container depot in Vlissingen.” Starting up an inland container depot allows optimal usage of incoming reefer containers. “Transport and handling costs are reduced, since only a single trip is needed.” Local exporters have the advantage that they no longer have to collect the containers from Rotterdam or Antwerp. Monica Pouwer: “We already have good experiences with local onion exporters using the empty containers.”
Hillfresh: Young, innovative and enthusiastic
“Having only started up in 2007, Hillfresh today is among the largest fruit and vegetable importers in Europe”, says account manager Paul Postema. For most of its trajectory, Hillfresh has had to deal with difficult market conditions. “It has made us innovative and enthusiastic. We always see a challenge.” Paul Postema notes a strong demand for taste from the market. “When we programme our products, taste is our priority because if the flavour is good, the consumer will repeat the purchase.” Together with the WUR University and breeding companies Hillfresh is developing a taste model for melons that can be used to screen breeding lines objectively for taste.
The importer of fresh fruits like melons, kiwi, grapes and citrus and vegetables such as tomatoes, peppers, lettuce and broccoli is mainly focusing on retail for sales. Other trading partners are wholesalers and the processing industry, mainly for convenience products. Coming from Spain, Israel, South and Central America and Africa, their fresh produce is sold in all of Europe. Another key point at Hillfresh is corporate social responsibility. Paul Postema: “The basics we have covered with standards such as GLOBALG.A.P., BRCI, or Cedex, but from retail we also see the need for attention to social and sustainability aspects.” Strongly socially committed, Hillfresh engages in several projects like the one in Peru, where alongside local authorities they invest in a clinic for pregnant women, or the partnership Hillfresh has with a producer in Namibia for solar energy.”
Purple Pride striving to raise aubergine consumption
Purple Pride is a Dutch association for the growers of aubergine. Loes Al, Purple Pride’s marketing and communication manager explains that the 7 growers together hold 40 percent of the Dutch aubergine area and with that they are the largest supplier of the purple vegetable in north- west Europe. Purple Pride likes to approach the market of this relatively unknown vegetable a little different. Loes AL: “Through our ambition and vision we make that the aubergine gets more publicity and we work towards raising consumption. “Several initiatives have been rolled out to make it easier on the consumer. “We launched ‘world cooking’, which is an accessible way to introduce the aubergine to the consumer.” The flow-packed aubergine contains a recipe that can be prepared within 15 minutes just by adding a few other ingredients. Other projects include: a social cookbook on Facebook, recipe booklets and training for retail staff.
The different market approach is also evident in the relationships with partners and customers. Loes Al:” We strive for structural relations with like-minded companies.” The key in that process is constant good quality. “Retailers see the added value of that and by joining forces together we come up with the best ideas.” One of the concepts developed together with a retailer is an aubergine with a BBQ label to be launched next summer in Scandinavia. Sustainability is an integral part of Purple Pride’s quality policies. “We mainly use biological crop solutions and focus on social corporate responsibility.”
Agrofair bananas, a complete fair trade concept
“Our brands differentiate through our strong commitment to the producers and our strong ethical commitment through the entire supply chain”. Agrofair was established in the Netherlands in 1996 with the objective of creating direct market access to Europe for small farmers. “We are primarily a production and distribution company, since 35% of our stakeholders are banana producers”, points out its managing director, Hans-Willem van der Waal. Agrofair has defended a complete fair trade concept in its entire organization since it was founded. “We are not just importing Fair Trade and organic products, our entire supply chain responds to the same concept” explains Hans-Willem. The company also answers to the IFS protocol, in the high level category since November. Almost 100% of its farmers are also GlobalGAP certified. As proof of its strong commitment to ethical trade in bananas and sub-tropical fruit, Agrofair received the Coop Swiss supermarkets’ “Natura 2012” award. “We are proud of this recognition, a great award to our engagement with sustainable development and to our responsible support of small farmers”. With 4 million boxes imported annually, bananas represent more than 90% of Agrofair’s business. They come from the major banana producing countries of Latin America, like Peru, Ecuador, Costa Rica, Panama, Colombia and the Dominican Republic. Other ethical trade products are citrus and various tropical fruits like pineapples, mangoes and coconuts. “We decided to stop with organic mangoes, since they represent a higher plant health and economic risk for our growers. It is a true ethical concern to limit our farmers’ risk”. 50% of volumes are both organic and Fair Trade, to respond to the preferences of the consumers and to the choice of the supermarkets to market them in the same “sustainable” segment. Germany, Switzerland, Italy and the UK are the major receivers of Agrofair bananas. Demand also exists on other European markets but still represents smaller volumes. “There is a potential demand for ethical bananas in the whole of Europe, but it is often limited by the price” considers Hans-Willem. Agrofair also imports 3 to 4 containers of bio & Fair Trade pineapples every week. Peru, Ecuador and Costa Rica are the main origins. 90% of the volumes are shipped by container, for more flexibility between the producer and the customer. Reefer shipments are still used on the direct routes, due to the faster transit time (just 14 days from Peru, instead of 21 to 24 by container). Agrofair bananas are popular under the brands “EkoOké” for both organic and Fair Trade and “Oké” for fair trade, also “Altromercato” in Italy (with the exclusive partner CTM) and “All Good” (with New Zealand partner All Good). “Elephant” is used for conventional bananas, which are also highly appreciated on the markets supplied by Agrofair. The organization has its own technical team in Latin America, based in Panama, in order to assist the growers with integrated quality management. The team focusses on constant improvements with implementation of the multiple quality certificates, organic crop management, research and productivity, traceability, packing and logistics. “Oké is viewed as a direct link between the small producer and the retailer”. PE
Newly formed Cooperation DOOR focuses on quality and reliability
Active for a little less than a year now, Dutch Cooperation DOOR is enthusiastically shaping its organisation. In the spring of 2013 a group of like-minded growers launched Cooperation DOOR with the goal to have an independent market position without associations to trading houses explains Corien Zuijdwegt, responsible for cooperation matters. Today Cooperation DOOR represents 350 hectares of which 250 tomatoes, 54 peppers in all colours, 37 aubergine and 11 hectares of cucumber. Sales and marketing activities are carried out by Door Partners under the brand names of Prominent for tomatoes, PapriCo for peppers, Purple Pride for aubergine and Green Diamond for cucumber. Corien Zuijdegt: “We offer a constant quality and focus on reliability.” Part of that are the GOBALG.A.P., QS, BRS and IFS certifications. “We are also investigating the implementation of the GOBALG.A.P. add-on module GRASP, which focuses on social aspects.”
A key focal point of success with Dutch produce organisations is the shaping of long-term relationships. Corien Zuijdwegt of Cooperation DOOR comments: “We want to develop together with our customers, be around the table with them and distinguish ourselves with marketing, quality and innovation.” And what better starting point for that than a newly formed, progressive group of growers. “We are an enterprising group with short lines, able to switch quickly and with clear communication.”
VI.P: a commitment to the environment
The Italian leaders put forward a philosophy that goes above and beyond their organic line to become a significant benchmark, while Europe increases its production to 24,000 tons.
The Val Venosta Association of Horticultural Cooperatives, VI.P, has a characteristic integrated production system that is very environmentally friendly. This product line includes over 10 varieties of organic apples, most notably Golden Delicious (almost 50% of production), Gala and Pinova.
The 132 organic farmers in the cooperative comply with the EU’s Regulation 834/2007 governing organic production. Furthermore, they are all members of the German associations Bioland and/or Demeter, which regulate organic farming with more stringent guidelines than the above regulation. This is why Val Venosta’s organic produce exceeds European standards of quality, cultivated exclusively with natural techniques and organic fertilizers, with no synthetic anti-pest products, fertilizers or herbicides. In addition, they use soil management methods with a low environmental impact to conserve and enhance soil fertility and plant resistance. All of this leads to more sustainable farming and more natural production.
To ensure these methods are followed, Val Venosta’s organic apples are produced applying strict controls and a thorough traceability system. Part of the consortium is a partner to Bio mit Gesicht (Bio with a face), so every package can be marked with a code on demand that the consumer may use in the internet to find all the information about the apple, the farmer and their farm (www.bio-mit-gesicht.com).
Val Venosta: sustainable production
In addition to implementing cultivation techniques and technologies that are environment ally friendly, all of Val Venosta’s apples are voluntarily subject to the EPD (Environmental Product Declaration), an internationally valid certification that verifies each of the stages in producing the apple so as to minimise CO2 emissions into the environment. One of the steps to reduce the environmental impact that affects the production phase is the installation of new photovoltaic systems on the cooperatives’ roofs that enable them to significantly reduce power consumption. This season, the area of solar panels has increased to 60,000 m² with the capacity to produce 10.8 million kWh a year. This is a reduction of 5,700 tonnes of CO2—another example of VI.P’s work to minimize its environmental impact. MV