Business Day

Asparagus harvest in Germany at risk due to absent workers

- Agency Staff Beelitz /AFP

hether it is served with butter and ham, drowned in hollandais­e sauce or topped with a fried egg, nothing says spring in Germany like asparagus.

But this year, the cherished vegetable may be a rare sight on dining tables as many of the foreign seasonal workers who would usually harvest the crop are unable to enter the country because of travel bans.

“The situation is very tense for us farmers,” says Thomas Syring, who runs a farm in Beelitz, a town in the state of Brandenbur­g known for its cultivatio­n of white asparagus.

Syring is just one of hundreds of farmers faced with the threat that his crops may be left rotting in the fields because of a serious shortage of workers. With warmer weather looming, farmers across Europe are scrambling for ways to fill the manpower gap as travel restrictio­ns imposed to halt Covid-19 contagion toughen.

During a normal season, Syring’s farm employs about 60 workers from Romania, Poland and Bulgaria. Only 10 have arrived.

“At the moment it is cold again, it will slow down the growth of the asparagus. But in a week, at the latest, the asparagus will come out of the ground and continue to grow,” he says at his farm, where rows upon rows of asparagus are waiting beneath sheets of white plastic to keep the soil warm.

Jürgen Jakob of Beelitzer Spargel, an associatio­n for asparagus farmers in Beelitz, says only half of the 5,000 seasonal workers required in the region have arrived so far this year.

“There is a need for quick clarificat­ion on how workers from Romania and Poland in particular can enter Germany,” says Udo Hemmerling, general secretary of the German Farmers’ Associatio­n.

About 300,000 seasonal

Wworkers come to Germany each year, mainly from Poland and Romania, to help with fruit and vegetable harvests, according to Hemmerling.

In Austria, which is facing a manpower shortage of 5,000 to help at fruit and vegetable farms, the ministry has set up a website to get people in other sectors to sign up and help. And in Switzerlan­d, fears are growing that only a fraction of the 33,000 seasonal workers required annually will be available this year.

German agricultur­e minister Julia Klöckner said Europe’s biggest economy requires “30,000 seasonal workers in March alone, with the number rising to 85,000 in May”.

She has suggested filling some of the vacancies with workers who have suddenly found themselves unemployed because of the Covid-19 crisis.

Measures agreed by the cabinet on Monday to help farmers include allowing the workers that are available to work for longer, and easing red tape around hiring temporary workers from other sectors.

But the farmers still prefer to bring in experience­d farmhands from abroad. With land transit routes blocked, some have resorted to flying workers in on chartered flights, but even though they have valid work permits, some of them are still not being allowed in.

Others are offering better deals to entice workers.

“For asparagus, our partners are offering to double salaries, as well as very good conditions on accommodat­ion and catering to assure workers that they won’t need to go out,” says Emese Molnár, who runs a Romanian company that sends seasonal workers to countries including Germany and the Netherland­s.

But beyond border barriers, some are simply worried about travelling. “If they’re too afraid to leave their home, how can they go abroad?” asked Simona, a labour agent for Romanian seasonal workers.

For Beelitz’s Jakob, time might be running out. “We are now very close to the asparagus harvest, but if we do not have enough harvest workers, we will not be able to harvest the whole crop.”

Bringing in workers from other sectors will not solve the problem because of the time it takes to train them. “Perhaps they will have learnt how to do it by the end of the asparagus season, but that doesn’t help us very much.”

PERHAPS [OTHER SECTOR LABOUR] WILL HAVE LEARNT HOW TO DO IT BY THE END OF THE SEASON, BUT THAT DOESN’T HELP US VERY MUCH

 ?? /Getty Images/Jörg Schüler ?? Skilled job: Germany
Greenhouse­s next to an asparagus field on Monday in
/Getty Images/Jörg Schüler Skilled job: Germany Greenhouse­s next to an asparagus field on Monday in

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