News
To borrow the expression used by the Chairman of the Tomato News Board, Martin Stilwell, in his opening editorial of our Yearbook 2020, the tomato processing sector “clearly had a surge of imports” during the pandemic crisis which has hit the world since last spring. More specifically, it was during the months of March and especially April 2020 that processing countries encountered a spectacular rise in demand for deliveries.
During these two very particular months, imports of pastes to the twenty most dependent countries – in other words those whose domestic consumption depends solely on external supplies, therefore excluding countries that are also processors such as Spain, the USA or Brazil – increased by 22% (+57,000 mT of finished products) compared to the March-April 2019 period, and by 26% (+66,000 mT) compared to the average for the March-April periods of the three previous years (2017, 2018 and 2019). To quote a few figures, total volumes delivered to Germany, the UK, Japan, the Netherlands, etc. in March-April 2020 amounted to more than 317,000 mT of finished products, while they amounted to “only” 260,000 mT in 2019 and 250,000 mT over the same period from 2017 through 2019.

However, on the same basis (comparison of monthly operations in 2020 with those of the three previous years), the jump in sales recorded during the spring did not really benefit either the United States or China. In both cases, despite a slight upturn in March-April, the performance of the first semester was significantly lower than it was during the same period between 2017 and 2019. Foreign shipments of US products fell by more than 11,000 mT, while those from China fell by more than 16,000 mT.
Beyond the usual variables for the current marketing year, the big unknowns for our sector to date remain linked to the pandemic, its duration and its intensity and, hence, to its possible impact on global demand and on the resulting social, economic, industrial and local agricultural consequences. It has been a long time since the agricultural and industrial partners of the various sectors around the world have had so little visibility and will have such great difficulty in planning for the next season.
Some complementary data
Comparison of total monthly imports from TOP 20 countries between 2014 and 2020.
See also our latest monthly trade situation

























