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Belgian baby spinach and baby leaf benefit from limited Southern European supply

Published Mar 3, 2023

Tridge summary

Belgian baby spinach and baby leaf grower, Rik Vanackere, reports a good winter for production and strong demand, benefiting from issues in Southern Europe that reduced competition. Despite greenhouse cultivation problems, energy costs were low and sales were high. Vanackere expanded production in 2022 and removed French beans to focus on baby spinach and baby leaf, meeting the higher demand and delivering under the Tomabel label. The introduction of Salanova, a small, loose-leafed lettuce, has also contributed to the company's success.
Disclaimer: The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

It has been a good winter for Belgian baby spinach and baby leaf. Despite the greenhouse cultivation problems, production remained good at grower Rik Vanackere. "We were lucky. It wasn't a harsh winter, so we could reduce energy costs. There was also a very strong demand for baby spinach, baby leaf, and Salanova," he says. The adverse weather in Southern Europe played a big part. "Our sales have been excellent in the last three months because there were fewer volumes from places like Spain. Their problems created a limited market supply, which we could fill nicely." Production expansionThat benefited the grower, who had expanded his production in the summer of 2022. "Before then, we also had French beans. The ever-growing demand, however, means we're back to pre-pandemic levels for baby spinach and baby leaf. It's even better than that. Thus, we removed the beans and expanded the baby spinach and baby leaf acreage. So, we had more production this winter and could meet the higher ...
Source: Hortidaily

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