The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

No deal Brexit could be a ‘catastroph­e’ for soft fruit

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A no deal Brexit could be a “catastroph­e” for Scotland’s £100 million soft fruit industry with the worst case scenario being that 90% of the 4,500 seasonal workers required to pick the crop in Courier Country next summer could disappear overnight, writes Michael Alexander.

The warning has been sounded by William Houstoun, general manager of the soft producer organisati­on Angus Growers Ltd, who said many of the company’s 18 growers in Angus, Perthshire and Fife had seen fruit left rotting on the bushes due to a labour shortage this summer – and with six months to go until Brexit, most businesses have put the brakes on future expansion plans amid fears the situation could get much worse.

Angus Growers Ltd is a soft fruit producer based in Arbroath in the heart of the traditiona­l Scottish berry growing area.

The company is owned and managed by 18 growers, the majority in Angus, Perthshire and Fife, who produce a variety of fruits and other crops. It markets their strawberri­es, raspberrie­s, blackberri­es and blueberrie­s and specialise­s in growing fresh fruit for the major supermarke­ts, shops, restaurant­s and food and drinks manufactur­ers.

For the past 15 years or so, the majority of the fruit has been picked by Eastern European seasonal workers from within the European Union.

However, in an interview with The Courier to mark six months until Britain leaves the EU, Mr Houstoun said that with so much ongoing uncertaint­y, it was proving incredibly difficult for fruit farmers to plan ahead.

“Farmers are paying up front now for fruit plants and grow bags they normally import from mainland Europe later on – so if there are any issues we are covered,” said Mr Houstoun. “That impact is on cash flow really. We are having to pay for things a month or two earlier than we might otherwise have to do. But the thing we don’t know about and can do nothing about is the people issue. A lot of our pickers who have been here this year want to come back – but they don’t know if they’ll be able to.”

On Tuesday the government announced its hope that EU citizens would be on an “equal footing” with people from outside the EU after Brexit.

Mr Houstoun said that if a Brexit deal was agreed, then a transition period should make fruit farm labour issues “manageable” as efforts are made to potentiall­y bring in workers from outside the EU in future years. But if there isn’t a deal, he said, farmers just don’t know if anyone will be able to come from abroad full stop – and this would be catastroph­ic. malexander@thecourier.co.uk

the thing we don’t know about and can do nothing about is the people issue. WILLIAM HOUSTOUN

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