Spotlight on tomatoes: Opportunities and challenges in store 

Did you know that tomatoes are among the world’s most popular vegetable crops? EU farmers alone produce around 17 million metric tons every year. COVID-19 has been an important driver of this thriving market: global retail sales of fresh tomatoes rose 17.6% in 2020, as people were forced to eat at home.  

At Hazera, tomatoes have a special place in our heart, and we offer hundreds of different varieties to farmers worldwide. Below, Alejandro Szechtman, Portfolio Marketing Director Tomato, sheds light on the challenges and opportunities facing the tomato sector today. 

Changing consumer tastes 

Key to the popularity of tomatoes is the range of options available. Right now, we see rising demand for convenient snack tomatoes. Smaller tomatoes require more harvesting labor, which can be a challenge given today’s tough economic climate and tight labor market. 

Meanwhile, consumers are increasingly ‘buying local’ to help the environment. But growing Mediterranean-quality fruits in northern Europe, for example, hasn’t always been easy. Now, thanks to Hazera’s experience and in-depth R&D, tastier tomatoes are available for more of the year. In parallel, we’re working with exporters to develop varieties with a longer transport life.  

Automation opportunities 

As manual labor declines in the tomato sector, we’re seeing farmers turn to automated, digitalized solutions to make production easier and faster. The resulting energy, cost, and resource efficiencies are extremely welcome in an industry where profits are often unpredictable. 

Automation is therefore an exciting area for investment, and we at Hazera are always working on R&D to make the dream solutions of the future a reality for the growers who need them. 

Addressing the impact of climate change 

A hotter climate will negatively affect plant growth and increase the risk of disease, making it harder to meet growing global demand.  

Hazera is working on solutions to help farmers prevent and overcome the effects of climate change. Not only are we breeding more adaptable varieties with higher drought and heat tolerance, but we’re also collaborating with growers to design and implement technologies to save water during irrigation.  

Meeting your tomato needs 

A Hazera, We’re world leaders in tomatoes, with a huge portfolio of varieties available. We draw on our decades of knowledge and experience to support growers around the globe to make their operations sustainable, so consumers can continue to enjoy top-quality tomatoes for many years to come. 

Looking for answers or advice about tomato production? Contact us today! 

 

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Hazera launches ToBRFV resistant varieties in Mexico

Hazera launches ToBRFV resistant varieties in Mexico

After having announced the pipeline of its ToBRFV resistant varieties, Hazera is proud to launch its first resistant varieties for the Mexican market and showcase them at the most important event for agriculture in Latin America- EXPO AgroAlimentaria Guanajuato® 2022 in Mexico.

 

ToBRFV launch

ToBRFV is very noticeable in Mexico and growers have been faced with diminished yields and battered fruit. ToBRFV is a huge problem for tomato production, affecting the yield and fruit quality with coloring issues and brown spots on fruits impacting directly on the marketable yield.

Since ToBRFV hit tomato growers worldwide, Hazera’s R&D team has been working tirelessly, for several years, to find varieties capable of giving an effective level of ToBRFV resistance without compromising the yield and fruit quality. “These efforts included in-depth trials in many locations, under different conditions in a global scale, to confirm that we are able to provide solutions, with the right balance between performance and ToBRFV protection”, according to Alejandro Szechtman, Hazera’s Portfolio Marketing Director.

With the optimal balance between protection and performance, Canelo, one of Hazera’s tomato varieties with resistance to ToBRFV, is an indeterminate Roma type with a vigorous plant, which maintains a balanced yield under adverse environmental conditions, due to its wide array of resistances. “Through vast trialing of Canelo in most regions of Mexico, including San Luis Potosi, Baja California, Michoacan, Sinaloa, and Coahuila, Canelo provides high yield, excellent fruit quality, good maturation with an intense red color, as well as excellent firmness, maintaining L and XL sizes with average weights of 150 to 160 grams throughout the production cycle”, according to Javier Angulo- Product Development Manager, Mexico.

 

“Canelo”

Canelo is a very productive variety, ideal for growing in a net house or greenhouse. Additionally, with its ToBRFV resistance, Canelo is able to serve the Mexican grower as an effective tool to face the highly infectious virus, which is supported by local growers, who claim that “Canelo is a very strong and healthy plant with outstanding high fruit quality.”

Looking forward, “Hazera is continuing its efforts to provide effective varieties to better cope with ToBRFV on a global scale and, in Mexico, will launch several new varieties, including the up and coming, new Indeterminate Grape Tomato, ‘Pendragon’, a variety that combines ToBRFV IR resistance with high yield, long shelf life, and good taste, following our commitment to provide growers varieties with the optimal balance between protection and performance,” says Alejandro Szechtman.

 

ToBRFV range / “Pendragon”

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