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Walnuts: A rubbish crop

November 15, 2016 at 11:37 AM , Der AUDITOR
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SOFIA. The unfavourable weather in Bulgaria has caused considerable crop damages. Now the growers have to sort through the mess.

Sorting through the rubbish
Normally the farmers are able to collect as much as 11,000-12,000 mt of in shells. This year they were, however, only able to sort out as little as 7,000-8,000 mt of marketable kernels. It is, furthermore, estimated that up to half of these kernels are no good. This can, however, only be established once the nuts have been cracked.

The carryover stocks will be sold out soon
The bigger farmers in Bulgaria, who mainly grow conventional walnuts, have established a strong presence in the local market and have been exporting their nuts for many years. Some of them have built processing factories and storage facilities, equipped with refrigerators. They are currently selling last year’s crop for 1.50-2.50 EUR/kg less than this year’s crop. However, the 2015 carryover will be sold out by the beginning of next month. This will force them to import kernels from countries such as Moldova and the Ukraine. The big growers are already importing kernels from Romania and the Ukraine, where the kernels are offered at much more competitive prices. This has pressurised the prices for conventional kernels in Bulgaria this week and further reductions are possible.

Organic walnuts, Bulgaria

Type

EUR/kg

light kernels (mix)

8.40

light halves

9.00

light quarters

8.00

light broken

7.00

amber kernels (mix)

7.40

amber halves

8.00

amber quarters

7.00

amber broken

6.00

walnut paste

12.45

in shell

4.50-5.50

EXW Bulgaria

Walnuts, Bulgaria

Type

EUR/kg

light kernels (mix)

6.89

light halves

7.50

light quarters

6.40

light broken

5.80

amber kernels (mix)

5.87

amber halves

6.00

amber quarters

5.80

amber broken

5.50

walnut paste

10.70

in shell

1.60-2.30

EXW Bulgaria

 

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