Canadian cherry exports increase with growing Chinese demand
“We’ve got more demand than we can possibly meet,” said David Geen, owner of Coral Beach Farms in Lake Country. "
It is resulting in higher returns for producers as Chinese consumers are willing to pay a premium price for a premium product.
“We tend to get more moderate temperatures, which means bigger fruit, sweeter fruit, juicier fruit. And also the fact that we are a long ways north puts us into the August marketing window when the U.S. is pretty much out of the game,” said Geen.
Two years ago, BC struck a trade deal to allow cherry producers unfettered access to the lucrative Chinese market.
A record $29.7 million worth of BC cherries were shipped to China in 2015 but that plummeted more than 40 per cent to $16.8 million last year due to widespread crop damage.
source: globalnews.ca