Potato Review
6 POTATO REVIEW MARCH/APRIL 2023 NEWS GRIMME UK Ltd. Get more information about this special offer from your local GRIMME Partner. £50 ACRE/YR * + Fixed Annual Rental (1+4) – applies to all CS150 Destoners irrespective of model or specification. + 5 Years Manufacturer's Warranty – for total peace of mind. + 5 Years GRIMME MachineCheck – free professional appraisal to identify essential seasonal maintenance. + GRIMME Yield Guarantee – field trails confirm the CS150 will increase your marketable yield when directly compared to any competition destoner in the same field. Fix your GRIMME Destoner cost over the next 5 seasons. *Example cost per acre based on Annual Rental of £13,500+VAT / 270 acres. Operating Lease – 5 annual rentals £13500+VAT (1+4). At the end of the lease the destoner is returned to GRIMME UK. Lease any new GRIMME Destoner from our current stock and harvest the rewards of advanced performance with the added security of extended warranty and professional planned maintenance. BUT HURRY – STOCKS ARE LIMITED! Long-serving WPC President hangs up his hat JOHN Gri n is to step down from his role of President of the World Potato Congress after 16 years’ service. Having joined the WPC Board of Directors in 2007, John has held various roles with the not-for-profit organisation. He played a key role in its growth and development while handling his own potato operations in Elmsdale on Prince Edward Island. Doctor Peter VanderZaag will now take over ast the WPC’s President and CEO. He initially joined the organisation in 2013 as International Advisor before becoming Director and has played a supportive role in developing programs for the past three congresses in China, Peru and Ireland. Peter, along with his daughter Ruth and son-in-law Nick, owns and operates Sunrise Potato, a large potato farming operation in Canada. He is well known in areas of international potato research and development. Professor and Potato Specialist with the Department of Plant Sciences at the University of Idaho, USA, Dr Nora Olsen will become new Vice- President of the WPC. Contracts up to 30% higher in EU as production costs hit EU potato contracts are now 20 to 30% higher as a result of increased production costs, a new report has revealed. Higher costs are weighing on growers’ profit margins and driving the cost of cultivation and storage to unsustainable levels, according to a recent report by Mintec Global, an independent provider of global commodity price data and market intelligence for the food industry . Storage and drying costs also rose significantly as a result of higher year-on-year electricity costs. This has led to some growers selling o supplies earlier in the season to combat higher drying and storage costs. In the 2022/23 season, demand for free-buy packing supplies was muted as many supermarkets contracted a higher proportion of their requirements to limit exposure to volatile potato prices. Therefore, significant driving factors, including higher input costs, have not been fully reflected in higher retail pricing. Contract prices, which were, on the whole, finalised at the end of last year, have risen by 20% to 30% across the EU for the 2023/24 marketing year to account for this, which could potentially result in higher retail prices when the 2023 crop is harvested.
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