Frozen Blueberries
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1Retail Frozen Blueberries: Supply Chain Report — Edmonton, Alberta
The No Name frozen blueberries (2kg) stocked in Edmonton retail stores sits at the value end of the frozen blueberry category. The product type is Individually Quick Frozen (IQF) — a processing method that freezes individual berries immediately after harvest to lock in flavour and nutritional quality. The frozen blueberry supply chain consists of two main fruit types: cultivated highbush blueberries and wild lowbush blueberries, with approximately 99% of the wild blueberry crop processed and sold as frozen or IQF product, with minimal fresh sales.
Domestic Wild Blueberries — the dominant source for Canadian private label
The primary supply source for Canadian retail private-label frozen blueberries is the wild blueberry industry of Atlantic Canada. Oxford Frozen Foods, based in Oxford, Nova Scotia, is the wholesale supplier to most major Canadian grocery chains, with their wild blueberries available through store private label products. Oxford manages over 24,000 acres of wild blueberry fields across Atlantic Canada and the United States, and has a processing capacity of over six million pounds of wild blueberries per day, with warehousing accommodating 282 million pounds of storage.
Wild blueberry growing regions are concentrated in Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Quebec, and Maine. Canadian processors such as Bleuets Mistassini, Bleuets Sauvages du Quebec, and Grand Bleu supply IQF wild blueberries domestically and internationally.
Cultivated Blueberries — a secondary and more volatile source
For cultivated highbush blueberries, the processing and freezing channel acts as a balancing outlet after the fresh market absorbs the best fruit. When fresh demand is strong, processors must pay more or accept lower volumes; when fresh demand is weak, more fruit diverts to freezing. British Columbia is Canada's primary cultivated blueberry-growing province. IQF processing facilities operate in Surrey, BC, where blueberries are frozen and warehoused before distribution.
Global sourcing as a backstop
South American countries act as key suppliers to North American retailers through counter-seasonal harvests, ensuring year-round availability. Peru has emerged as a particularly significant supplier. Through advanced pruning techniques and a diverse mix of low-chill varieties, Peruvian producers have spread production over a much longer period, avoiding massive seasonal peaks and bringing a level of price stability to the market that allows retailers to plan long-term promotions with confidence.
After harvest, blueberries undergo washing, sorting, defect removal, IQF freezing, metal detection, and final packaging before entering the cold chain. Cost in frozen blueberries is dominated by the farmgate fruit price and pack-out yield, but the most avoidable cost for procurement is often downstream: claims, rework, expedited freight, and quality-driven yield loss.
Older blueberry varietals are increasingly relegated to the frozen and processing sectors while the fresh tier is reserved for premium, branded fruit that can command a higher price point. This varietal segmentation means that what reaches the frozen aisle is often fruit that did not qualify for fresh retail — a factor that shapes both supply volumes and the commodity price floor.
Edmonton is a landlocked market located roughly 1,000 km from the primary cultivated blueberry processing region in BC, and approximately 4,500 km from Atlantic Canada's wild blueberry operations. This geographic position is a structural cost factor.
Frozen product must travel entirely by refrigerated road transport. Frozen food transport in Alberta requires reliable -18°C to -25°C conditions, with no temperature fluctuation permitted during transit. Edmonton has a developed cold storage infrastructure: Lineage's Edmonton South facility, spanning over 57,000 sq. ft., supports blast freezing, customs clearance, freight consolidation, and USDA inspections. Additional operators including Landtran, MTE Logistix, Trenton Cold Storage, and VersaCold also maintain Edmonton-area facilities serving the retail distribution network.
The practical routing for most frozen blueberries reaching Edmonton is: Atlantic or BC origin processing facility → regional distribution centre (typically in BC or Ontario) → cold storage in Edmonton → individual store delivery.
1. Farmgate fruit price and fresh-market competition
Frozen blueberry prices are closely linked to the fresh market. When fresh demand and prices are strong, processors must pay more for fruit or accept lower volumes, tightening frozen supply. Price moves often lag harvest conditions because inventory buffers delay the downstream effect. This dynamic means retail frozen blueberry prices do not always move in a predictable seasonal pattern.
2. Supply pressures — disease, drought, and yield declines
A fungal disease that spreads quickly has begun affecting key blueberry-producing areas as of early 2025. Researchers warn it could significantly impact the $9.25 billion blueberry industry. At the same time, as of April 2025, global blueberry exports had dropped 12%, and Mexican output was expected to decline by approximately 9%, to 73,500 tonnes. These supply-side pressures feed directly into procurement costs for frozen product.
Canadian wild blueberry farmers have also faced severe price compression at the farmgate level — one New Brunswick operator reported selling for $0.40/lb in 2024, down from $1.10/lb in previous years — creating financial stress that threatens the long-term viability of some growing operations.
3. Trade policy and tariff environment
The Canada-US blueberry supply chain is deeply integrated, and trade disruptions carry real cost implications for Canadian retailers. Approximately 40 million pounds of Washington State blueberries are shipped to Canada for packing or processing each year, with most fruit processed and packaged in British Columbia before returning to US markets. Disruptions to this cross-border flow would constrain Canadian processing capacity, reducing supply available for domestic retail.
From an economic perspective, a 10% tariff functions as an equivalent reduction in demand in the destination market, and if applied to the blueberry sector would effectively roll back approximately eight months of the industry's historical annual growth.
Canada removed most counter-tariffs on US imports effective September 1, 2025, though tariffs on steel, aluminum, and autos remain in effect. Fruit imports have been largely excluded from retaliatory tariffs for now, but USMCA is scheduled for its six-year review in July 2026, and the outcome of that review will carry pricing implications for the entire North American berry supply chain.
4. Country-of-origin scrutiny and compliance costs
Origin labelling has become a meaningful issue in the current buy-Canadian environment. Oxford Frozen Foods, which describes itself as the world's largest supplier of wild blueberries, was fined $10,000 by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency in 2025 for mislabelling its blueberries as Canadian. The company has manufacturing facilities and farming operations in both the Maritimes and the United States. Increased CFIA enforcement activity adds compliance overhead for processors and private-label suppliers, and consumer awareness of origin is elevated — a factor that can affect retailer shelf placement decisions and promotional strategy.
5. Cold chain logistics costs
Cold-chain logistics adds non-linear cost and risk. Freight is not only a cost line — delays translate into storage and disruption costs. For Edmonton specifically, the distance from both Atlantic and BC growing regions means that freight and cold storage fees represent a larger share of landed cost than they would for retailers in Vancouver or Toronto. Fuel costs, refrigerated truck availability, and seasonal road conditions in Alberta are all variables that affect the final cost of product arriving at the retail distribution centre.
Retail frozen blueberries in Edmonton are primarily sourced from Atlantic Canadian wild blueberry processors — with Oxford Frozen Foods the dominant private-label supplier — supplemented by BC cultivated product and counter-seasonal imports from South America. The price of the product at shelf is most directly shaped by farmgate fruit prices (themselves influenced by the fresh-versus-frozen allocation dynamic and harvest yields), cross-border trade policy, cold chain freight costs across a long inland distance, and ongoing supply-side stress from disease and climate variability. The USMCA review in mid-2026 is the single most significant near-term trade policy event with the potential to meaningfully shift cost structures across the category.
- Fresh Fruit Portal — "In 2025 the global blueberry industry lived its 'Blue Renaissance'" (December 31, 2025): https://www.freshfruitportal.com/news/2025/12/31/blueberry-industry-recap/
- Fresh Fruit Portal — "The impact of new U.S. tariffs on blueberry exports" (April 8, 2025): https://www.freshfruitportal.com/news/2025/04/08/the-impact-of-new-u-s-tariffs-on-blueberry-exports/
- Fresh Fruit Portal — "North American Blueberry Council: Consistent retail presence is critical" (April 21, 2025): https://www.freshfruitportal.com/news/2025/04/21/the-north-american-blueberry-council-consistent-retail-presence-is-critical-for-the-success-of-u-s-growers/
- Tridge — "Frozen Blueberry Procurement Intelligence Playbook" (March 2026): https://blog.tridge.com/blog-posts/frozen-blueberry-procurement-intelligence-playbook-validated-updated-for-procurement-leaders-mar-2026
- Tridge — "Frozen Blueberry Sourcing (IQF): Where Cost, Risk, and Negotiation Leverage Really Sit": https://blog.tridge.com/blog-posts/frozen-blueberry-sourcing-iqf-where-cost-risk-and-negotiation-leverage-really-sit
- OPB / KLCC — "Washington state's blueberry industry faces an icy outlook as US-Canada tariff talks unfold" (April 14, 2025): https://www.opb.org/article/2025/04/14/washington-blueberry-industry-canada-tariffs/
- CBC News — "Blueberry growers worried they won't survive if U.S. introduces tariffs" (January 14, 2025): https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/blueberries-new-brunswick-tariffs-trump-1.7429950
- CBC News — "Oxford Frozen Foods fined $10K for mislabelling blueberries as Canadian": https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/nova-scotia/oxford-bluberry-producer-mislabelled-product-country-of-origin-9.7145011
- Oxford Frozen Foods — Company and Product Information: https://www.oxfordfrozenfoods.com/products
- Daily Business Voice — "Blueberry Shortage: Global Supply Chain Challenges Ahead": https://dailybusinessvoice.com/blueberry-shortage/
- Canada.ca — "Complete list of U.S. products subject to counter tariffs" (updated September 1, 2025): https://www.canada.ca/en/department-finance/programs/international-trade-finance-policy/canadas-response-us-tariffs/complete-list-us-products-subject-to-counter-tariffs.html
- Government of Canada / Open Canada — "Impact of US tariffs on groceries and affordability": https://search.open.canada.ca/qpnotes/record/ic,IND-2026-QP-00003
- Lineage Logistics — Edmonton South Facility: https://www.onelineage.com/facilities/edmonton-south-alberta-lineage
- Freight Board Logistics — Refrigerated Trucking Alberta: https://www.fbl-services.com/refrigerated-goods-logistics
- Raiwal Group — IQF Cultivated Blueberry Supplier (Surrey, BC): https://raiwalgroup.ca/frozen-blueberry-wholesale-affi-con/