“We are starting 2014 with new products adapted to the demands and lifestyle of the consumer” is how Eduardo Córdoba, Primaflor’s National Sales Manager, explained Primaflor’s new campaign. Primaflor are increasing their product range and making use of their logistic and commercial infrastructure to become an agrifood company. In spite of the maturity reached in the fresh cut salad market, Primaflor increased its sales another 3.5% in 2013. In baby leaves the increase was more noticeable due to the added value of it being a new product. “The consumer is looking for new tastes and textures” explained Eduardo Córdoba, and so the company is going for new products using new ingredients and tastes for consumers who are looking for variety. This was their strategy when they launched their very successful baby leaf salads – Capriccio, Delicious and Luxure. “We are restructuring to adapt and change our portfolio” Eduardo Córdoba told us and not only the products but also the format. For this reason, the Almeria company has included smaller containers as consumer tendency is to buy little and often.
This is why Primaflor are expanding their existing ranges with products which add value. “In Spring we will be launching a completely new range”, he mentioned without revealing the actual products although he would say that it would be 4 products which would complement their fresh cut salad range. Some time ago they launched a range of sauces and other complements which has been very successful judging by the 2 million euros invoiced in 2013. With respect to salad products, the iceberg lettuce is still Primaflor’s biggest seller, selling 150 million lettuces in 2013, an increase of 4 million from the year before. The national tendency is for iceberg sales to decrease as fresh cut salad sales increase. To offset this, Primaflor has expanded beyond the borders where they have established a presence in the United Kingdom, the Nordic countries and Eastern Europe. PE
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Hispalco’s vintage feel with “Classic Edition” in citrus
Year 2014 sees the market launch of new packaging for oranges and clementines with a vintage feel, called “Classic Edition” and available both for the Monna Lisa® and Unicorn® brands. A smaller than conventional box, with a net weight of approximately 5 kilos for clementines and 4 kilos for oranges. A practical format designed to become a sales unit aimed at the final consumer. The “Classic Edition” concept will be available all year round and maintains the same quality and flavour features of the Super Extra and Special Selection packagings.
In addition, to diversify its product origins, Hispalco now includes grapes and cherries produced and packaged in Italy – La Gioconda® and Unicorn®. For the coming campaign we will have Moro and Tarocco variety Italian oranges, as well as kiwis, apples, nectarines, peaches and apricots produced and packaged in France – La Joconde® and Unicorn®. Hispalco will be introducing all these products at stand B-8, Hall 11.2 of the Fruit Logistica trade fair. Hispalco mainly operates in European markets, including Russia, Ukraine and Eastern Europe, as well as the United States, Canada and Persian Gulf countries. Nevertheless, the company’s policy at these latest destinations is caution, where “growth has two take place gradually and securely”, explained its managers.
In reference to their quality certificates, in 2013 they achieved the High Level acknowledgement, becoming one of the few Spanish companies to achieve this rating. Hispalco’s main aim is that the Premium quality of their products should match their flavour. The company’s future plans include introducing new fruits of non-Spanish origin and coming up with new designs to surprise us all. The company has been working for three years now with their organic brand Hispalco® Bio, which maintains the same Premium quality and great flavour as the rest of their brands.
Brazilian lime exports in good shape
Although Brazilian fresh produce is facing challenging times due to the weakening of the Real, Brazilian lime sales represented via ABPEL, the Brazilian Association of Fresh lime producers and exporters, are still in good shape. Brazilian Tahiti lime exports have increased by nearly 15% over these last 3 years. The variety is known as being a juicy, tasty fruit, which is easily combined with many drinks and recipes.
The south of Brazil contributes largely to the production of Tahiti limes (65%), although the north (35%) has been continuously increasing production in recent years. Distribution of Brazilian limes is managed by wholesalers that distribute the produce to retailers and small distributors.
Following ABPEL´s international expansion strategy, some market research is being done to introduce Brazilian limes in Arabic countries, in association with a company member of ABPEL. Although this exotic fruit’s exports are in good health, the local market moves considerable volumes, too, once the fruit has been harvested at the beginning of the year. The Brazilians very much appreciate a few drops of lime in appetizers and snacks such as sausages, salami, etc. The lime production chain is basically in the hands of small family farm producers who are aware of the sustainability of their business. These families respect the environment, forest and rivers, since they are working for future generations (children and grandchildren) who will inherit the family´s land as the whole family’s main asset and income.
To get the fresh produce into Europe, ABPEL exporters have been through the entire quality control process (such as GlobalGAP and others) and homologations in order come into line with EU food policy. With the aim of raising their popularity among European consumers, mainly in the UK and Germany (the main importing countries), ABPEL has been promoting limes over the last year in partnership with APEX (Brazilian Agency for Export and Investment Promotion) through social networks. As a result, nearly 5,000 users in Facebook UK and almost 1,500 in Germany now follow Brazilian Limes and some competitions have been carried out with prizes for some followers. Another initiative is also having an effect, which has been carried out in the social networks. Some gift boxes were sent to 10 food bloggers in the UK and Germany.
DimmidiSì launches new container for Foodservice range
Vegetales Línea Verde has launched a new pack for the Foodservice range of its own international brand, DimmidiSì, comprising a wide assortment of products, all natural, delicious and very fresh, ideal for the Ho.Re.Ca. Channel.
As of this year, all products in their Brotes Tiernos (Tender Shoots) Foodservice line will hit the market in a new and practical container designed with cutting-edge technology. This way, the Brotes Tiernos varieties are presented in practical, smart containers manufactured using the latest techniques. The trays come in an “open-and-close” format with fully transparent lid, allowing us to appreciate the product’s freshness more clearly. In addition to its smart design and new dimensions for customer convenience, the renewed container incorporates advanced anti fog technology and ultrasound lock, protected by a warranty seal. This new packaging was developed in cooperation by Vegetales Línea Verde and the supplier. In addition, the company has the exclusive use of this pack for 18 months. In the Foodservice range we also find the Classic Salads line, which keeps the traditional format transparent bag.
Ecuador sets its sights on export expansion
Ecuadorian mango sector hopeful that improvements to packhouses will help boost exports to European markets
During the 2013/14 season, Ecuador has exported worldwide 11.9m boxes of 4kg mangoes, equivalent to approximately a 10% increase compared with the previous campaign.
According to Mr Bernardo Malo, Chairman of the Board of Directors of Ecuador’s Mango Foundation, the vast majority of these volumes – some 85% to be exact – were shipped to the US, which is by some margin the country’s largest market for the fruit. The remainder goes principally to European markets, Canada and Mexico during the season.
However, the Foundation says that important improvements in working practices at mango packhouses in Ecuador, which have been put in place over the recent seasons, are expected to have positive repercussions to exports to Europe.
“Important improvements to packing plants have been carried out with the aim of being able to increase the participation of Ecuadorian mangoes in Europe,” the Foundation said. “Beginning from the 2014 season, we think that Europe will be a destination with a lot more potential for Ecuador.”
In terms of varieties, Tommy Atkins accounts for the majority (67%) of all mango production in Ecuador, followed by Kent (16%), Ataulfo (12%) and the remaining 5% divided between other varieties. For the Foundation, this focus on the most popular mango varieties is also helping make Ecuadorian mangoes attractive for international markets.
Of course, having the correct certification standards in place is vital when it comes to competing effectively in European markets, and for this reason the Foundation said all the mango packhouses in Ecuador are HACCP or Globalgap certified. An estimated 65% of all mango orchards in the country have also now achieved Globalgap certification, the organisation said, demonstrating that both producers and packers had made important investments to increase their competitiveness in international markets.
With this in mind, the Foundation said its member exporters were now looking towards Asia for future growth. “Currently, the sector can be found working to open new markets, particularly China and Japan, due principally to our compliance with phytosanitary protocols demanded by those markets,” it said.
Based in Guayaquil, the Ecuadorian Mango Foundation is a non profit organisation whose main objective is to support producers and exporters in Phytosanitary matters, with a special focus on using the country’s natural resources in a efficient and sustainable way in order to increase productivity.
Mangoes are principally produced in the province of Guayas, with an approximate surface area of around 6,300 ha of which 5,500 ha are dedicated to export. The remaining hectares are devoted to local, Andean markets, and the production of juices and mango concentrate.
Kiwi Atlántico with top end kiwi fruit
The Spanish kiwifruit brand, Kiwi Atlántico, launched a new feature this year. Kiwi Atlántico “Black Label”, a kiwi of extraordinary quality for its texture, flavour, aroma and colouring. True to the rigorous control of their products, Kiwi Atlántico submits all fruit received to a thorough analysis with a laser and NIR measuring system which, without damaging or destroying the individual fruits, is able to indicate their Brix degree, hardness and dry matter content, which are the criteria necessary to determine the quality and potential of the fruit. Thanks to all these efforts and their interest in supplying consumers with the best product in the market, this year Kiwi Atlántico is presenting a selected fruit of high organoleptic quality, with a uniform and intense flavour.
Kiwi Atlántico was founded in 1988 as an association of 30 kiwi farmers from Galicia and Asturias and currently has more than 70 members and 20 collaborating producers, grouping farms of different sizes. The company is composed only of producers, with an extensive background in farming. Producing in Spain distinguishes this brand from others operating in the kiwi sector of the domestic market. For 25 years now they have been committed to the quality of the source of their product.
Essential Costa Rica makes Berlin debut
A campaign that focuses on the ecology and culture of Costa Rica – and its links to the country’s fresh produce sector – will form the theme of national export promotional agency Procomer’s 2014, beginning with its presence at the Fruit Logistica 2014 trade show in Berlin.
Launched during 2013, the Essential Costa Rica brand will be a key part of Procomer’s promotional strategy for the year, which will once again endeavour to push the country’s fruits and vegetables into new markets.
According to Procomer’s Alvaro Piedra, the opening of new markets for Costa Rican fruits remains a central priority for Costa Rica’s government, with the organisation having launched a promotional drive in Peru to complement its existing South America strategy, which is being carried out in conjunction with Chile’s department for commercial promotion.
Also in South America, Procomer plans to strengthen its promotional work in Colombia and Argentina, while it is currently studying the possibility of entering the Brazilian market.
At a European level, the organisation last year carried out its first commercial mission to Poland and is also developing ‘virtual’ missions to the Russian, Swedish and Lithuanian markets – three countries where until now Costa Rica has not had a direct export presence.
However, in spite of its export expansion, Piedra’s says the country’s fresh produce sector continues to face a number of major challenges, which need to be tackled to ensure further growth. “A country like Costa Rica faces several challenges – we have an economy with a very strong agricultural sector, but one which is in the process of transformation towards being service-based,” he says. “Our focus as a country is social wellbeing and this means there are social costs, added to which producing and maintaining employees are both expensive.
“We strive to maintain excellent quality standards and because of this we cannot compete on price, so we have focused on competing on quality.”
As well as this, Piedra says Costa Rican growers have to cope with high taxation on production and packing materials, an unstable exchange rate, high fuel and electricity bills, and an inadequate access to international shipping routes, particularly when it comes to accessing new markets.
In addition, he says internal transportation remains very costly within Costa Rica, while many producers are experiencing difficulties in obtaining credit from banks.
To combat such challenges, Piedra says Procomer offers diverse support programmes to the export sector, through which it looks to not only increase Costa Rican exports, but also increase the competitiveness of producers and exporters. “From personal consultants that teach entrepreneurs how to fill-out their own paperwork for exports to reduce costs in these areas to advice on the logistics of exports, finances and negotiations,” he explains.
“We have worked hard to diversify markets, establish export consortiums and added value programmes, among other support services. We also support the sector through different trade associations and discussion forums that cover all the issues of importance to producers.”
Export success
During 2012, Costa Rica produced more than 9.8m tonnes of fruits and vegetables, of which over 4.6m tonnes was exported. However, the volume of exports is continuing to increase – between 2009 and 2010, it rose 16.6% and shipments during the following 2010/11 and 2011/12 seasons also increased by 4% and 2.1% respectively.
As with previous years, bananas, pineapples, melons and watermelons accounted for the lion’s share of Costa Rica’s fresh produce exports, although the country also exported significant volumes of mangoes, yucca and plantain.
Working with ethical trading groups such as the Fairtrade Foundation and the Rainforest Alliance, Costa Rica has long been keen to stress its ‘green’ credentials – perhaps not surprising in a country where 26% of its total surface area (some 1.3m hectares) are legally protected areas. “Costa Rica is a country that focuses on the environment and social wellbeing where organic programmes are very important,” says Piedra. “These include the Ministry of Agriculture’s National Programme for Organic Agriculture, which promotes and strengthens sustainable organic practices. “At a promotional level, we have worked for a number of years with BioFach trade fair in Germany.
“However, the national market absorbs a lot of our production and the rest of what is available is also placed under contract with international buyers.”
Chilean Committee monitors frost and climate change impact
According to export forecasts delivered to the Kiwi Committee, the losses suffered in Kiwi volumes due to the September frosts affected almost 60% of the fruit, so the export figures for 2014 are estimated at around 86 thousand tons, compared to more than 216 thousand tons exported in 2013. The Chilean Kiwi Committee is now monitoring the farms affected by the frosts. The aim is to generate technical information to be able to formulate recommendations against potential weather events such as those experienced this spring and to ensure wood for the next season.
This task forms part of the project: “Development of a Systematic Model of Response Actions to Frosts, Based on Productive Management Alternatives in Kiwis”, financed by the Foundation for Agrarian Innovation. The project seeks to establish a model for systematisation of actions taken in response to frosts, based on production management alternatives to recover fields and orchards and regain production capacity. To this end, the project scrutinises fields and orchards with different levels of frost damage, some of them coinciding with the follow-up fields that the Kiwi Committee has been monitoring since last year. The different levels of damage caused by the intense frosts have changed the typical phenology of the plants, making it especially necessary to reconsider the tasks of handling the vegetation. The 12-month project was started up in October 2013. Activities to be carried out will include an assessment of the outcomes of all the actions taken.
The proposal, as described by Elizabeth Köhler, the Kiwi Committee’s General Coordinator, is to follow up the normal development of the crop and its ripeness parameters, to gather background information on the crops, in addition to the behaviour of orchards with different levels of frost damage. A total of eight orchards are currently being monitored. One is located in the Metropolitan Region (Aculeo), two in the Sixth Region (Peumo and Tinguiririca) and four in the Seventh Region (Curicó, Rauco, Lontué and Linares).
Prohass assures high quality for this campaign
To promote Peruvian avocados in Europe, Prohass has continued with its tasting campaign, because, according to the manager, Arturo Medina, once a European customer tries a Peruvian avocado, they will buy it again. In promotional campaigns directed at Europe, they invested 400,000 USD in Germany, 150,000 USD in the UK and 250,000 USD in France. The quantity of Peruvian avocados destined for international export is approximately 107,000 t, according to the data provided by ProHass, of which 70,000 tons goes to Europe and 25,000 tons to the USA. In spite of this, E.U. consumption only grew by 1% whereas it grew by 10% in the USA. “We want the same to happen in Europe as has happened in the U.S. and we know it is going to take a lot of work” explained Medina. “In Europe, people do not know that there are many ways to eat avocado, in contrast with the U.S. which has the influence of Mexico”. Nevertheless, the Prohass director trusts that 2014 will be a good year, due to the high quality of the fruit in 2013, which will serve to restore the much damaged image of the Peruvian avocado after the 2012 campaign. Lima, the Peruvian capital, is where the 2015 World Avocado Conference will be held and where 1500 guests from around the world are expected. “We are already organizing the event. We have created a scientific committee to prepare the conferences in which the best analysts and experts will be involved and we hope that this will be the best avocado congress to date” said Medina.
Eurobanan, successful campaign with Kiwiberico
The latest campaign for Eurobanan was highly positive, confirms Director General Joaquin Rey: “We have a product that is gaining wide acceptance by consumers and having a brand that makes reference to its source helps position it.” In 2013 they traded around 10,000 tons of Kiwiberico, of which some 400 t was organic, and they expect to repeat similar volumes in the 2013/2014 campaign.
Switzerland, Holland, Ireland and the UK are still the main markets. Most progress and growth has taken place in the “ready-to-eat” or “5th range” sector, since the end client appreciates it when products with great flavour reach them at their optimum stage of ripeness.
In the Northern Hemisphere, France used to be the only reference for flavour and sweetness, and now, thanks to their star kiwi product, Kiwiberico, they have managed to increase this supply and even improve on it. With Kiwiberico they have made a strong commitment to the most innovating market strategies to achieve their final objective, i.e. to bring the customer a healthy and beneficial product with an unmistakable flavour, while encouraging a heart-healthy life by eating fruit and vegetables, along with regular physical exercise.
The Eurobanan Director reveals: “The secrets of our kiwi’s success are very basic: we intervene technically in production, conservation and marketing. The fruit is harvested at 7 to 10 degrees Brix (sweetness) and 16 to 18% dry matter (flavour), an improvement of more than two points over kiwis harvested in the same hemisphere in other countries, achieving a product with great flavour, which is what the customer is looking for.”
Their distribution strategy, as Joaquin Rey explains, is also quite simple: “We aim to reach the highest possible number of consumers. We do it through the means at our disposal to make the end consumer aware of the brand, appreciate the taste and, most of all, repeat their purchase. We have even carried out crossover promotions, for example one we did with Coplaca, where if you buy 1 kg of bananas, you also get a free mesh bag of 4 kiwis. Our brand has also featured in several promotional activities alongside the 5-a-day Association, which specialises in this type of action.”
KIWIBERICO has a section called KIWIBERICO BIO given over to organic produce. This produce meets all the necessary guidelines to be considered organic, including the absence of chemical fertilisers or pesticides, improved watering treatment for the trees or the purity of the seeds, which have not been genetically treated. All of this gives rise to a kiwi fruit that is 100% natural, with an unmistakable flavour that is also environmentally responsible.