The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Keep calm and eat your fries

- SYLVAIN CHARLEBOIS GUEST OPINION Sylvain Charlebois is senior director of the Agri-Food Analytics Lab and professor in food distributi­on and policy at Dalhousie University.

Most of us love fries and chips.

They’re even in Canada’s newest food guide. But reports suggest that North America is experienci­ng potato shortages and processors, and those out west, are especially scrambling to get potatoes into their plants. This could spell trouble as we soon may be paying more for one of our favourite staples.

A cold and very wet fall has negatively impacted crop yields among potato farmers. Almost 20 per cent of potatoes were left out in fields due to poor quality. The United States Department of Agricultur­e is projecting a 6.1 per cent decline in total crops from a year ago, making it one of the lowest crop yields since 2010. In Manitoba, more than 18 per cent of potato crops remained unharveste­d, while in Alberta, 6.5 per cent of potato crops were damaged by an early frost.

In the food industry, size matters when buying potatoes – buyers are always looking for larger, bigger potatoes, but this year the harvested potatoes were much smaller than usual.

But it’s difficult to tell whether retail prices will be affected at all. The truth is that potato prices have already gone up this past year. Potatoes at retail are 20.7 per cent more expensive than just 12 months ago. According to Statistics Canada, a 10-pound bag of potatoes in Canada retails for an average of $9.77, while a year ago it was $8.11. Frozen fried potatoes have gone up 17.1 per cent as well, retailing now at $3.02 for one kilogram. These increases, the most important increases ever recorded, are difficult to explain. Potato production over the last five years in North America has been quite steady. In 2010, when the harvest was even worse than this year’s, retail prices barely moved at all, suggesting that the market was not willing to budge on pricing, despite lower inventorie­s. But the market today is a little different as we crave the product much more.

If prices do go up, it won’t be because our farmers are raking it in, making more money. Farmers won’t likely get more for their crops as they typically lock themselves into unbending contracts before the growing season even starts. Farmers affected by weather will have crop insurance. Not all of them, but many of them do. Processors may need to pay more since they might be required to purchase inputs from other sources which are normally more expensive. But processors have infinite ways to hedge against abnormal weather patterns and will get the products they need to manufactur­e the fries and chips we buy at the store or restaurant, one way or another.

Increases may very well happen in food distributi­on and retail where demand is quite strong. In 2018, frozen potato sales at retail increased by 7.1 per cent in Canada, and 2019 could be an even better year. Potatoes requiring some preparatio­n time at home have also seen significan­t sales increases, exceeding seven per cent in recent years. That may explain why retailers are charging much more for the product. Since 2018, potato retail prices have quietly increased at a dramatic rate, but consumers have not yet been spooked by this – at least, not yet.

The rules are different in foodservic­e, and we shouldn’t expect any price changes. Charging more for a side staple like potatoes is always more challengin­g for restaurant­eurs and fast food operators. Potatoes are no steak, fish, or pasta. But you may see some operators revert to the practice of shrinking portion sizes, and charge patrons the same price, as in retail.

Canada is only the 18th largest potato producer in the world, but we do take our potatoes seriously. The country won’t run out of potatoes any time soon and they will remain quite affordable for most of us for a very long time. So, keep calm and eat your fries.

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123RF.COM PHOTO

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