Quebec strawberries struggle against cheaper imports from California and Mexico
CBC
Quebec strawberry season is off to an early start, but the tasty red fruits are facing some unexpected competition from south of the border.
Cheaper berries, abundantly produced in California and Mexico, are proving fierce competition, according to Jasmine Sauvé, head of the Association des producteurs de fraises et framboises du Québec.
"They are overproducing, and because they don't want to affect their local price, they're sending strawberries to the Montreal market," she said.
"And they're probably losing money doing that. So they're selling at such a low price right now that they probably don't even cover their costs. But it's invading our market here in Montreal."
The price difference can be significant. For example, at Supermarché Mile-End in Montreal, Quebec strawberries are selling for about $5 a litre. But strawberries from California, they're going for about $3 when compared by weight.
"It is frustrating," said Phil Quinn, of Quinn Farm in Notre-Dame-de-l'Île-Perrot, west of Montreal.
"It is unfair in some aspects. They don't have to contend with frost risk down there, and they do have access to a whole lot more migrant workers. Minimum wages are lower, and costs are lower as well."
Quinn said there's an obvious difference between the local strawberries and those that are imported, but the trick is getting customers to see that difference.
"Believe me, the smell coming out of these strawberries is so good that it actually attracts customers," said Abbas Muhammad of Supermarché Mile-End, referring to the local berries.
According to Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, Quebec has about 120 frost-free days a year to produce fruit like strawberries.
In 2022, thanks largely to an increase in cranberry and lowbush blueberry production, Quebec became the top fruit-producing province, accounting for more than 33 per cent of the country's production volume. Data from 2023 hasn't been published yet.
Quebec has long been recognized as the Canadian province that exports the largest quantity of fresh strawberries, accounting for nearly half of the entire market.
Mathieu Beauregard, co-owner of Ferme chez Mario in Sainte-Madeleine, Que., said people are searching for the best prices to feed their families. However, he said he's not discouraged by the competition because there are still people who prefer the tastier, locally grown fruit.
Marc André Isabelle, of the family farm Belle de Coteau-du-Lac in Coteau-du-Lac, Que., encourages people to buy local.