Frozen Peas
Track prices for No Name frozen peas.
Retail Frozen Peas: Supply Chain Overview - Edmonton, Alberta
Although Canada is the world's largest exporter of peas, the bulk of that crop is dry yellow peas grown for protein and pulse markets in Saskatchewan and Alberta. The retail frozen pea category is a different supply chain entirely. In 2023-2024, only about 11 percent of Canadian pea production was green (garden) peas, and commercial green pea acreage destined for processing into canned and frozen product is concentrated in southern Ontario and Quebec. Major growing regions include Quebec's Richelieu valley and the St. Lawrence River Valley, along with the area around London and Windsor in southwestern Ontario. The combination of soil quality, climate, and proximity to processing plants in those provinces is what supports a domestic frozen pea pack at retail scale.
For the Edmonton retail shelf, this means that a bag of frozen green peas is most likely Eastern Canadian in origin, despite Alberta's position as a major pea-producing province by tonnage. The dry pea crop grown in the prairies feeds protein isolate facilities, export buyers in China, India, Bangladesh, and the U.S., and pet food and animal feed channels rather than the frozen vegetable case.
Green peas for processing are a short-season crop. Canadian fresh peas are available from June through October, with field-to-freezer activity concentrated in mid-summer. From planting, peas remain in the field for roughly three months before they reach the optimal sugar and tenderness window for processing. The harvest itself is mechanical and time-sensitive: specialized pea viners strip pods from vines in the field, crack them open, and shake out the peas, with the residue returned to the field as green manure.
Because tenderness peaks for only a narrow window, processing logistics are aggressive. Bonduelle North America's Canadian operations, for example, have committed to freezing peas within 40 minutes of harvest. Plants therefore run at very high utilization for a few peak weeks per year, then draw down inventory over the following twelve months. The capital intensity of this seasonal pack model is one of the structural drivers of unit cost in the category.
Retail frozen peas are produced using Individually Quick Freezing (IQF). After harvest, peas are cleaned, graded by size, and blanched in steam or hot water to deactivate the enzymes that would otherwise cause off-flavours and colour loss in frozen storage. They are then rapidly cooled and conveyed through a freezing tunnel operating between -25°C and -40°C. The rapid temperature drop forms small ice crystals that leave the cell walls intact, preserving texture, colour, and nutrient content without the need for chemical preservatives. IQF product is then packed into retail bags or bulk totes and held at -18°C, at which temperature quality is generally maintained for up to 18 months.
IQF processing is energy- and capital-intensive. Tunnel freezers, automated graders, blanchers, and metal detection equipment represent significant fixed costs that must be recovered over a single concentrated pack window. Retail-ready bagging adds further cost compared to industrial cartons destined for foodservice or further-processing customers, and the same plant typically allocates output across whole-pea retail packs, mixed vegetable blends, and foodservice cases according to where margin is strongest in any given season.
The Canadian processed vegetable industry is moderately consolidated, and frozen peas in particular flow through a small number of large processors.
The most significant player is Nortera, formerly known as Bonduelle Americas Long Life. In June 2022, the Fonds de solidarité FTQ and the Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec each acquired 32.5 percent of the business from the French parent Bonduelle Group, which retained a 35 percent stake. The renamed company operates 13 processing plants across Canada and the United States, reports annual sales of approximately $1.15 billion, and employs roughly 3,000 people across North America. In Canada it markets its own brands - Arctic Gardens and Del Monte (under licence) - while also packing significant private label volume for major grocery chains. Bonduelle's Canadian frozen and canned operations alone process more than 335,000 tons of vegetables per year through seven plants - four in Quebec and three in Ontario - sourced from roughly 800 contracted farmers in those provinces.
McCain Foods is another prominent player in Canadian frozen vegetables, although its core franchise is potato products rather than peas. International players including Conagra and General Mills also participate in the category through brands and private label arrangements.
For private label retail SKUs - the dominant volume in the Edmonton frozen pea market - product is contracted to whichever processor offers the best combination of price, capacity, and specification fit. There is no fixed manufacturer for any given retailer's own-brand frozen peas, and contracts can rotate between Canadian processors and U.S. or imported product as commercial conditions shift.
The cold chain requirements for frozen peas are identical to those for any IQF product: continuous holding at -18°C from the freezing tunnel through the retailer's freezer case. Temperature excursions during transit do not necessarily render product unsafe, but they cause clumping, freezer burn, and texture degradation that translate into customer rejections, retailer claims, and in-store markdowns.
Edmonton sits roughly 3,500 kilometres by road from the Quebec and Ontario processing belt. Retail frozen peas destined for the Edmonton market move through long-haul refrigerated trucking, often with intermediate cold storage at Western Canadian distribution centres. Lineage Logistics operates three facilities in the Edmonton area, providing cold storage, LTL consolidation, and blast freezing services that grocery distributors rely on. The combination of distance from primary pack plants, fuel costs, refrigerated trucking rates, driver availability in Alberta's climate, and multi-stop delivery to individual stores all add a structural premium to landed cost in Edmonton relative to Eastern Canadian markets where the product is packed.
Where retailers source private label frozen peas from U.S. processors instead of domestic plants - which does happen, particularly for blended vegetable SKUs - the cold chain instead runs from California, Washington, or the Midwest northward through Vancouver or directly across border crossings into the Prairies, with similar inland distribution costs once the product is in Western Canada.
The frozen vegetable category sat at the centre of the 2025 Canada-U.S. tariff dispute. Effective March 4, 2025, Canada imposed 25 percent counter-tariffs on roughly $30 billion in U.S. goods in response to U.S. tariff actions. Effective September 1, 2025, Canada removed most of those counter-tariffs in recognition of the U.S. allowing most Canadian goods tariff-free entry under CUSMA, with retained tariffs limited to steel, aluminum, and automobiles. Frozen vegetables therefore returned to largely tariff-free status under CUSMA-compliant trade.
CUSMA's rules of origin are particularly favourable for this category. Vegetables harvested in Canada qualify under the "wholly obtained" rule of origin, meaning that frozen peas grown and packed in Quebec or Ontario qualify for tariff-free treatment in any direction across CUSMA partners. Canadian-origin frozen peas therefore enjoy structural protection regardless of further trade volatility, which provides Canadian processors with a real competitive moat against U.S.-origin product when retailers tender private label contracts.
The 2025 tariff turbulence nonetheless contributed to import cost volatility for U.S.-sourced frozen vegetables during the period when counter-tariffs were active, and encouraged some Canadian buyers to favour domestic supply or to qualify additional non-U.S. backup origins. That risk-management posture is likely to persist even with counter-tariffs lifted, supporting domestic processor utilization.
It is worth noting that pea trade tensions exist in adjacent markets. India reinstated a 30 percent tariff on yellow peas effective November 2025, and China imposed 100 percent duties on Canadian pulses in March 2025. These actions affect dry yellow pea growers in Saskatchewan and Alberta rather than the green pea processing chain, but they can indirectly compress prairie pulse prices and shift acreage allocations in ways that occasionally ripple into the broader pea ecosystem.
Frozen vegetable processors operate under the Safe Food for Canadians Regulations and are subject to Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) oversight, including the National Chemical Residue Monitoring Program, which tests both domestic and imported frozen produce for pesticide residues and chemical contaminants. Major retailers additionally require BRCGS or SQF certification at each facility supplying their private label programs. The fixed compliance overhead - audits, documentation, in-line metal detection, and traceability systems - is a meaningful per-unit cost, particularly for processors that allocate a large share of output to retail private label.
After repeated frozen produce contamination incidents in adjacent categories in recent years, retailers have tightened supplier specifications for both finished product testing and raw material residue limits, narrowing the pool of plants eligible to pack their private label SKUs. This further consolidates volume into a smaller number of established processors and limits the bargaining leverage of new entrants.
Wholesale Canadian pea prices in 2026 sit in a range of approximately USD $0.69 to $1.38 per kilogram for raw product, with frozen pea export prices in 2024 holding between $1.74 and $1.76 per kilogram. These figures sit underneath a finished retail bag, on top of which sit blanching and IQF processing, packaging, cold storage, long-haul refrigerated freight to Alberta, retailer margin, and compliance overhead.
The North American peas market is forecast to grow from USD $4.45 billion in 2025 to USD $6.28 billion by 2031, a compound annual rate of approximately 5.8 percent, with frozen vegetables specifically tracking growth in the 5 to 7 percent range. Demand pressure from health-oriented consumption and meal-prep convenience supports volume, but on the cost side, food inflation in Canada has resurged - reaching 5 percent year-over-year in the most recent reading, the highest level since late 2023, driven in significant part by imported processed food costs and the depreciation of the Canadian dollar in late 2024. For frozen peas specifically, the domestic-pack share of supply provides some insulation from currency-driven import inflation, but cold chain costs, energy prices at processing plants, and compliance overhead all continue to pressure the unit economics.
The structural picture for the Edmonton consumer is therefore one of stable raw-material origin with predictable supply, offset by a long inland distribution tail and a market dominated by a small number of large processors. Private label SKUs in particular are exposed to whichever direction the next contract round moves on processor allocation, freight rates, and CAD-USD exchange.
- Saskatchewan Pulse Growers - Pea Market Opportunities: https://saskpulse.com/growing-pulses/peas/pea-market-opportunities/
- Canadian Food Focus - What's in Season? Fresh Green Peas: https://canadianfoodfocus.org/in-season/whats-in-season-fresh-green-peas/
- Canadian Food Focus - Fresh to Frozen Peas: https://canadianfoodfocus.org/on-the-farm/fresh-to-frozen-peas/
- The Canadian Encyclopedia - Pea: https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/pea
- Ontario Processing Vegetable Growers - Green Peas: https://www.opvg.org/ontario-processing-vegetables/green-peas
- Food In Canada - Harvest time (Bonduelle profile): https://www.foodincanada.com/food-business/harvest-time-76358/
- Nortera - About Us: https://www.norterafoods.com/en/about-us/
- Nortera - Bonduelle announces sale of 65% of BALL: https://www.norterafoods.com/en/medias/bonduelle-announces-the-sale-of-ball/
- Nortera - Bonduelle Americas Long Life Becomes Nortera: https://www.norterafoods.com/en/medias/bonduelle-americas-long-life-becomes-nortera/
- IndexBox - Canada's Green Peas Market Report: https://www.indexbox.io/store/canada-peas-green-market-analysis-forecast-size-trends-and-insights/
- PMG Engineering - Frozen Pea Processing: A Guide to IQF Technology and Plant Design: https://pmg.engineering/Article/215/frozen-pea-processing-a-guide-to-iqf-technology-and-plant-design/
- Global Resources Direct - Using IQF Technology for Green Peas Processing & Preservation: https://www.globalresourcesdirect.com/blog/green-peas-processing-and-preservation-using-iqf-technology/
- 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
- Trade Commissioner Service - Understanding CUSMA Compliance: https://www.tradecommissioner.gc.ca/en/market-industry-info/search-country-region/country/canada-united-states-export/us-tariffs/understanding-cusma-compliance.html
- MLT Aikins - Tariffs on Canadian agriculture: Risks, rules and strategies for exporters: https://www.mltaikins.com/insights/tariffs-on-canadian-agriculture-risks-rules-and-strategies-for-exporters/
- Mordor Intelligence - North America Peas Market: https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/north-america-peas-market
- Bank of Canada - Understanding the resurgence of food inflation in 2025: https://www.bankofcanada.ca/2026/02/sparks-at-bank-article-2026-3/
- Lineage Logistics - Edmonton North Facility: https://www.onelineage.com/facilities/edmonton-north-alberta