UK - Potato supplier seeks alternatives to Maris Piper after floods pushes prices up

27.02.2024 478 views

One of the UK's top potato suppliers is looking for alternatives to the popular Maris Piper due to rising costs and unreliable crops during extreme weather.

A combination of more floods and droughts has made growing potatoes difficult over the last six years, with smaller profits made worse by higher energy and fertiliser prices. Farmers are having to rethink growing certain types of potatoes that are hard to grow and could lead to financial loss.

Paddy Graham-Jones, who is in charge of buying potatoes for supplier Albert Bartlett, said the Maris Piper, King Edwards and Maris Peer are all being looked at. He said: "A number of varieties are 'customers favourites' King Edwards, Maris Piper, Maris Peer but are hard to grow and so can be risky for growers to produce."

When Maris Pipers were first sold in 1966, they were sold unwashed but now lots of water is needed to clean the skins before packing. "The financial loss of producing a crop of Maris Piper that does not make washed pre-pack grade, can be the difference between profit and loss for a grower," Mr Graham-Jones explained.

The team at Albert Bartlett has been given the job of finding an alternative variety that is better suited to the current climate. Mr Graham-Jones said: "Our agronomy team is working with our retail customers to try and develop alternative varieties that still offer customers great taste, but are easier to grow, require less fertiliser and water, and cope better with the climatic extremes that occur on a more regular basis than they did 20 years ago."

The price of a Maris Piper 2kg bag at Sainsbury's rose as much as 22.2%, from £1.35 to £1.65, between January 8 and February 12, according to analysis of Assosia data by trade magazine The Grocer. Tesco also saw a rise of 21.3% in the same period while the price increased 10% on average across Lidl, Waitrose, Aldi, Tesco and Sainsbury's.

A Sainsbury's spokesperson said: "While prices can go up and down for a range of reasons, we're committed to offering our customers great choice and value when they shop with us. We offer a variety of potatoes including a 2kg bag of white potatoes for £1.29p."

Tim Rooke, chairman of the National Farmers Union (NFU) potato policy group, said the root cause of potato price rises dates back to a drought in the summer of 2022, when potatoes intended for storage were brought to market to prop up supply. He said: "The potato yield was considerably less than it should have been and the country nearly ran out of potatoes. When the crop ran out the prices got very high, so many farmers decided to sell early to recoup some of the money lost."

Potatoes are usually planted in March and April but a wet spring in 2023 delayed planting until late April which further depleted stocks. "From planting three weeks late, the crop was never going to yield to its full potential," said Mr Rooke of the autumn 2023 harvest, which was also blighted by a series of storms and floods. "Potatoes could not be lifted because it was too wet and consequently there are potatoes left in the fields. It has been a perfect storm really."

In her final speech as NFU president on Tuesday, Minette Batters called for action to improve "water security" She told the NFU annual conference: "We must pay farmers for storing flood water on their land. We must speed up planning for on-farm reservoirs to store water for crop irrigation. Water security must underpin national food security."

Source - https://www.mirror.co.uk

15.01.2026

Soil-based method can stop locust swarms from destroying crops

"They're very destructive when there's a lot of them, but one-on-one, what's not to love?" says Arianne Cease. She's talking about locusts.

15.01.2026

Fifty French farmers arrested after storming agriculture ministry building in Paris

Around 100 members of the Confédération Paysanne union entered a section of the ministry, which they occupied for an hour to denounce the government's agricultural policy. 

15.01.2026

Kenya - Government sets up strategic animal feed reserves to shield livestock from drought

In a bid to protect livestock and pastoralist livelihoods from recurring droughts, the government has ordered the establishment of strategic national animal feed reserves.

15.01.2026

India - Tamil Nadu govt releases Rs 111.96 crore to farmers for crop damage

Tamil Nadu government on Thursday said it has issued a Government Order releasing Rs 111.96 crore to provide relief to 84,848 farmers for damage of agricultural and horticultural crops on 1.39 lakh acres due to rains during the Northeast monsoon and Cyclone Ditwah in 2025.

15.01.2026

How Agriculture Insurance Is Transforming Farmers’ Climate Resilience in Rwanda

When floods swept through Kamonyi District years ago, maize fields that had taken months of labor were flattened overnight. For many farmers, those moments meant more than lost crops—they threatened livelihoods, school fees, and food security.

15.01.2026

Taiwan develops TC9 banana resistant to Panama disease

The Taiwan Banana Research Institute has developed a new banana cultivar, Tai-Chiao No. 9 (TC9), with resistance to Panama disease. The variety is intended for future deployment beyond Taiwan, pending completion of plant breeders' rights in overseas markets.

14.01.2026

UKEF backs €193mn loan for key agricultural project in Uganda

UK Export Finance (UKEF) has backed a €192.9mn loan to finance the first phase of a key agricultural project in Uganda set to boost the country’s economy.

14.01.2026

India - Haryana releases ₹116 crore to 53,821 farmers for crop loss due to heavy rains

Providing financial relief to farmers, Haryana chief minister Nayab Singh Saini on Wednesday released a crop compensation of ₹116.15 crore to 53,821 farmers for losses suffered due to heavy rains in August-September.