Organic fresh produce sales up by 4% in Q1 2022
While organic fresh produce sales continued to grow in Q1, overall volume declined due to elevated pricing. Conventional produce showed the same pattern, with sales up 7% for the quarter (totaling $16.8 billion) and volume declining by 2.7%.
Higher average retail pricing in Q1 is responsible for most of the sales gains of produce items, with conventional produce average pricing up more than 10% compared to Q1 of last year. By contrast, organic fresh produce pricing rose just below 5%, suggesting it has been able to absorb more of the increased costs related to the current inflationary environment.
Packaged salads continued to dominate in total organic dollars, reaching nearly $400 million for the quarter, a gain of 1.5% year-over-year. The berry category (which includes strawberries, raspberries, blueberries, and blackberries) grew 9.3% in sales from Q1 2021, with strawberries posting gains in both dollars and volume of more than 16%. Blueberries, on the other hand, were down 7% in dollars and 19% in volume from the previous year.
“While organic fresh produce volume declined for the first time in a long while, organic dollar sales continue to grow even after consecutive years of growth due to higher prices across the entire produce department,” said Matt Seeley, CEO of Organic Produce Network. “There remains room for growth of organic fresh produce as long as suppliers remain aware of not only the rising costs of organic produce but also the opportunity presented by a significantly larger increase in conventional produce prices.”
The southern region of the U.S. continued to show the most year-over-year improvement, with dollar growth rising 8%, and volume up 3.6%. The Northeast was the weakest region, with dollars declining 1.1% and volume down 7.7%.