Chickpeas - Canned
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1Retail Canned Chickpeas: Supply Chain Overview - Edmonton, Alberta
Although the chickpea inside the can starts in the same Saskatchewan field as the dry chickpea on the shelf two aisles over, the two products travel almost entirely different supply chains by the time they reach an Edmonton store. Canada is a major grower and dry-pack processor of chickpeas, but it has a very limited domestic canning industry for pulses at retail scale. The vast majority of canned chickpeas sold in Canada is imported as a finished, retail-ready product, primarily from Italy, the United States, and Mexico. The cost stack for the 540 ml can is therefore dominated not by the Saskatchewan farmgate price but by the cost of the steel can itself, the imported finished goods price, the freight position from a Mediterranean or U.S. cannery to an Alberta distribution centre, and the trade policy environment that governs cross-border food trade.
Canada is consistently among the top five global chickpea producers and is one of the world's largest exporters of dry chickpeas, with roughly 85 to 95 percent of the national crop grown in Saskatchewan. A meaningful share of that crop moves out of Western Canada in bulk and is processed and packed elsewhere, including by Italian, Spanish, U.S., and Middle Eastern canners. In practical terms, a can of chickpeas on an Edmonton shelf may contain Canadian-grown beans that have been shipped to Italy, soaked, blanched, canned in brine, retort-sterilized, labelled, palletized, and shipped back to North America for distribution.
The mainstream canned-chickpea brands present in Canadian grocery span a small set of structural suppliers. Unico, Primo, and Aurora are Italian-heritage brands now controlled by larger food groups (Unico is a Sun-Brite Foods brand in Canada, Primo is owned by Sun-Brite as well, and Aurora is part of the Aurora Importing & Distributing portfolio); these brands typically pack in Italy or in U.S. plants under contract. Goya, the dominant Hispanic-foods brand in North America, sources canned pulses from a network of plants concentrated in the U.S. Northeast and Mexico. Private-label canned chickpeas under banners such as No Name (Loblaw) and Compliments (Sobeys/Empire) are sourced through co-pack arrangements with the same set of North American and Italian canners. Sun-Brite Foods corporate site Aurora Importing & Distributing
For most canned-pulse SKUs the empty can and the lid account for a larger share of the landed cost than the chickpeas inside it. North American food cans are predominantly two-piece tinplated steel, manufactured by a small group of metal packaging suppliers. Crown Holdings, Sonoco, and Silgan Containers dominate North American food can supply, with Silgan alone supplying a substantial share of U.S. and Canadian shelf-stable can volume. Silgan Containers — Operations Canadian retail food canning capacity is materially smaller than U.S. capacity, and even Canadian-packed canned goods often use cans manufactured in U.S. plants and shipped north empty.
Tinplate steel is a globally traded commodity priced off hot-rolled coil with a tinplating premium, and pricing is sensitive to the same tariff actions that govern primary steel. U.S. Section 232 steel and aluminum tariffs were raised from 25 percent to 50 percent on June 4, 2025, and remain in force on most country origins. U.S. Department of Commerce — Section 232 tariff actions Canada's countervailing position on U.S.-origin steel was eased in the September 1, 2025 rollback of most CUSMA-related counter-tariffs, with retained Canadian counter-tariffs concentrated on steel, aluminum, and automobiles. Government of Canada — Canada's response to U.S. tariffs The net effect is that the cost of food cans landed at a Canadian or U.S. cannery sits at a structurally higher level in 2025 than it did in 2024, and that increase is passed through to packed canned-pulse pricing with the usual lag.
The interior coating of the can is a smaller but persistent cost line. North American canners have been transitioning away from BPA-based epoxy linings toward acrylic, polyester, and oleoresin alternatives in response to retailer and regulatory pressure; Health Canada permits BPA in food-contact uses but has flagged it for restriction in certain categories, and major Canadian retailers have set BPA-free targets for their private-label programs. The non-BPA coatings are typically more expensive per square metre and add a small but real cost to the modern food can.
The canning step itself is a mature industrial process. Dry chickpeas arrive at the canning plant in totes or supersacks, are inspected and cleaned, hydrated by an overnight soak, blanched, filled hot into the can with a brine solution (water, salt, and typically a small amount of calcium chloride to maintain firmness and citric acid or EDTA as an acidulant or chelator), seamed shut, and then retort-sterilized at approximately 116 to 121 degrees Celsius for a residence time set to achieve commercial sterility. The retort step is the energy-intensive line in the process and is sensitive to natural-gas and steam costs at the plant.
Canning plants in this category run mixed product lines: the same equipment that fills chickpeas may also fill kidney beans, black beans, white beans, and lentils on different campaigns. This shared-equipment economics is part of why the canned-pulse category is concentrated in a small number of large North American and Italian plants rather than spread across many smaller specialists, and it is part of why the per-unit price differential between canned chickpeas and other canned pulses on the shelf is small even when the underlying farmgate prices diverge.
Two trade agreements govern the dominant import paths for canned chickpeas into Canada. The Canada-European Union Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA), provisionally in force since September 2017, eliminated tariffs on substantially all agri-food trade between Canada and the EU, including canned legumes. Government of Canada — CETA Italian-packed canned chickpeas therefore enter Canada tariff-free, which is the structural reason Italian-origin canned pulses are competitive on the Canadian shelf despite the long ocean freight position. The 2017 CETA tariff elimination is the single most consequential post-2010 policy event for the Canadian canned-pulse category.
The Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA) governs the U.S.- and Mexican-origin paths. Canned legumes under HS 2005 generally moved tariff-free between the three countries before the 2025 trade actions and have largely returned to that footing after the September 1, 2025 rollback of Canada's counter-tariffs on most U.S. consumer goods. Government of Canada — Canada's response to U.S. tariffs The retained Canadian counter-tariffs on U.S. steel and aluminum continue to flow through indirectly via the can rather than via the canned good itself.
The Indian chickpea tariff regime, which is the dominant policy variable for the dry-bulk export market, is largely irrelevant to retail canned chickpeas in Edmonton. India does not export meaningful volumes of canned chickpeas to Canada and is not a buyer of Canadian canned chickpeas; the Indian policy story belongs to the dry market.
Canned goods are dense, durable, and shelf-stable, which makes them efficient to ship per dollar of value but heavy to ship per kilogram. A 540 ml can of chickpeas weighs approximately 540 grams and contains roughly 240 grams of drained chickpea — meaning the freight bill effectively pays to move water, brine, and steel as well as bean. This is part of why imported Italian canned chickpeas are most competitive at the larger pack sizes and at the lower retail price tiers where the absolute freight cost per can is small relative to the shelf price.
Italian-origin canned pulses move from northern Italian ports (Genoa, La Spezia) through the Mediterranean to a Canadian east-coast port (Montreal or Halifax), with onward intermodal rail and truck distribution to the Alberta distribution centres operated by the major Canadian grocers. U.S.-origin canned pulses move primarily by truck or intermodal rail from the U.S. Midwest and Northeast across the border to those same Alberta DCs. Container freight rates have eased substantially from the 2021-2022 peaks, which has narrowed the landed-cost gap between Italian-origin imports and U.S.- or Canadian-packed product.
Edmonton's inland position adds a modest premium relative to Vancouver or Toronto for the final distribution leg but is not the dominant cost variable in the category. The Calgary regional distribution centres are the primary Alberta hub for most national grocers, with onward truck distribution to Edmonton-area stores.
The 540 ml can (commonly described as a 19-ounce can in Canadian retail) is the dominant retail format for canned pulses in Canada and accounts for the bulk of shelf facings. Smaller 398 ml (14-ounce) cans appear in some private-label and premium SKUs, and larger 796 ml (28-ounce) cans are common in foodservice and ethnic-grocery channels but rarer in mainstream Canadian grocery. The 540 ml format is sized for a single-meal household preparation of hummus, chana masala, salad, or stew, and the per-100-millilitre price across the major brands at this format tends to cluster within a narrow band because the underlying input and packaging costs are similar across the brand set.
The price-positioning logic on the shelf reflects a small number of structural factors. Italian-heritage brands such as Aurora and Unico carry a modest premium that reflects perceived authenticity in Mediterranean cooking applications and a higher allocation of marketing spend per unit. Hispanic-positioned brands such as Goya carry a similar premium in the Hispanic-foods channel for the same reason. Private label sits at the bottom of the price ladder and represents the most direct read on the underlying landed cost, less the retailer margin. The narrow price band across the category is itself a signal that the canned-pulse category is treated as a low-margin staple by most Canadian grocery banners and that retailer-level pricing latitude is limited by competitive dynamics in the centre-store dry-grocery aisles.
Three forces shape the trajectory of retail canned chickpea pricing in Edmonton over the medium term. First, the cost of the can itself is at a structurally elevated level because of the 2025 U.S. Section 232 tariff increases on steel and the retained Canadian counter-tariffs on U.S. steel; this cost is not specific to chickpeas but applies to the entire shelf-stable canned-grocery category and is the most material near-term pressure on retail pricing. Second, the underlying chickpea price is soft on the strong 2025-26 Canadian crop, which provides modest offsetting relief on the bean cost line but is a small share of the landed can. Third, ocean container freight has normalized from the 2021-2022 peak, which supports the competitiveness of Italian-origin imports and helps cap the upper bound of shelf pricing through cross-supplier competition.
Working against these pressures are general food-inflation factors — energy, packaging materials beyond the can, plant labour, and inland freight — which continue to grind upward at a low single-digit rate. The category is competitive enough at the retail level that wholesale cost moves typically pass through with a one-to-two-cycle lag, and the dominance of imported finished goods means that the Canadian-dollar exchange rate against the euro and U.S. dollar is a meaningful background variable.
- Saskatchewan Pulse Growers — Chickpea Market Opportunities. https://saskpulse.com/growing-pulses/chickpeas/chickpea-market-opportunities/
- Government of Saskatchewan — Chickpea Adaptation and Varieties. https://www.saskatchewan.ca/business/agriculture-natural-resources-and-industry/agribusiness-farmers-and-ranchers/crops-and-irrigation/field-crops/pulse-crop-bean-chickpea-faba-bean-lentils/chickpea/adaptation-and-varieties
- Government of Canada — Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA). https://www.international.gc.ca/trade-commerce/trade-agreements-accords-commerciaux/agr-acc/ceta-aecg/index.aspx?lang=eng
- Government of Canada — Canada's response to U.S. tariffs. https://www.canada.ca/en/department-finance/programs/international-trade-finance-policy/canadas-response-us-tariffs.html
- U.S. Department of Commerce — Section 232 steel and aluminum tariff actions. https://www.commerce.gov/news/press-releases
- Silgan Holdings — Silgan Containers operations. https://www.silganholdings.com/our-businesses/silgan-containers/
- Sun-Brite Foods — Corporate site (Unico, Primo brands). https://www.sunbritefoods.com/
- Aurora Importing & Distributing — Corporate site. https://www.aurorafoods.com/
- Health Canada — Bisphenol A (BPA) and food packaging. https://www.canada.ca/en/health-canada/services/food-nutrition/food-safety/packaging-materials/bisphenol.html
- Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada — Outlook for Principal Field Crops. https://agriculture.canada.ca/en/sector/crops/reports-statistics/canada-outlook-principal-field-crops-2025-11-24