The collapse of radicchio and a long tail of South African clementines in Italy

Published 2021년 10월 19일

Tridge summary

The article provides an overview of the prices and market dynamics for various autumn and winter produce in wholesale markets across Italy and Verona. It highlights an increase in the prices of tomatoes, pears, and many vegetables, with the exception of radicchio. The prices for apples, persimmons, and grapes, particularly seedless varieties, remain stable or slightly increase. In Southern Italy, local clementines are replacing Spanish and South African ones, and chestnuts are becoming popular. The article also notes a quiet period in the market with low sales and quality issues in some products.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

We are still at the passage of the season, but in the wholesale markets autumn and winter products such as chestnuts, persimmons, kiwis and more and more clementines are increasing: from Puglia, Calabria but there is a lot of Spain and it persists, albeit at the headlines tail, the South African product. The dear tomato continues with the Dutch bunch close to two euros, the same goes for pears. The prices of many vegetables go up, but not for the radicchio which sells for a few cents. There are signs of growth in the grape world for seedless varieties. In Padua the grapes are good: “They begin to appreciate the seedless ones” Quiet period, too much for Roberto Boscolo, head of Fedagro Padova, who underlines: “Little sales, some products have high prices and are not always of good quality”. Which references are best? "Apples are going like this, persimmons start but have important prices, while grapes are well consumed and medium-high prices are kept". Let's see them: “A good ...
Source: Myfruit

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