Potatoes
Compare prices for fresh potatoes across varieties.
Retail Potato Supply Chain Overview - Edmonton, Alberta
Canada is largely self-sufficient in potatoes, producing roughly 124 million hundredweight (about 5.6 million tonnes) across the 2024 crop year. Production is concentrated in three provinces: Prince Edward Island, Manitoba, and Alberta, which together account for the majority of national output. Alberta alone produced approximately 30 million hundredweight in 2024 and has been the fastest-growing major potato province over the last decade, driven by processing demand and the availability of irrigated land in the south of the province.
For Edmonton retailers, this means fresh table potatoes carrying a "Product of Canada" label are most often grown within the province during storage season (roughly October through June). The southern Alberta potato belt — Taber, Vauxhall, Bow Island, Lethbridge — relies on irrigation from the Oldman and Bow river systems and produces both processing varieties and table stock. The Edmonton region itself sits north of the main growing belt; product travels into the city from southern Alberta packing sheds via highway.
During the new-crop gap in summer (roughly July through early September, when stored potatoes from the previous year run out and Alberta's new crop has not yet been harvested), retailers fill the shelf with imports — primarily from Washington State, Idaho, and California, with some volume from Florida earlier in the spring. This seasonal switch is one of the largest single drivers of summer price variability for fresh potatoes in Edmonton.
Roughly two-thirds of Canada's potato crop goes to processing rather than fresh table use. Russet Burbank remains the dominant processing variety because of its suitability for french fries; Yukon Gold, red varieties such as Norland and Chieftain, and white varieties such as Superior dominate the table side. The split matters at retail because processing-grade potatoes are typically grown under multi-year forward contracts to McCain, Cavendish Farms, or Lamb Weston, while table stock is sold through fresh packers and brokers at prices that float much closer to weekly market conditions.
When processors short their contracts (because of weather, blight, or storage losses), they have historically purchased on the open market, pulling supply away from fresh packers and pushing retail prices upward. The opposite also happens: when processors over-contract relative to demand, processing-grade potatoes can spill into the fresh channel as no. 2 grade or institutional-bag stock, softening retail prices.
The Canadian potato industry is highly consolidated on the processing side. McCain Foods, headquartered in Florenceville-Bristol, New Brunswick, is the largest privately held food company in Canada and the world's largest manufacturer of frozen french fries, supplying roughly one in four french fries consumed globally. McCain operates a processing facility in Coaldale, Alberta, and announced a $600 million expansion of that plant in 2023, doubling capacity, with the expansion expected to drive additional contract acreage in southern Alberta through the late 2020s.
Cavendish Farms, the food-processing arm of J.D. Irving Limited, operates a major plant in Lethbridge, Alberta, alongside its Atlantic Canadian operations. Lamb Weston, a U.S. processor spun off from ConAgra in 2016, operates a plant in Taber, Alberta, and announced expansions in the region in 2023. These three players together account for the majority of processing demand in western Canada and exert significant influence on contract pricing, varietal mix, and downstream availability of specific cuts and grades.
On the retail side, fresh table potatoes for Edmonton stores are typically packed and branded under retailer private labels — President's Choice and No Name for Loblaw banners, Compliments for Sobeys/Safeway, and Western Family or Your Fresh Market for others — sourced from regional packers such as the network of growers and shippers organized under the Potato Growers of Alberta. United Potato Growers of Canada acts as a national co-operative providing market intelligence and supply coordination across provinces.
Potatoes move largely tariff-free between Canada and the United States under CUSMA, and the U.S. is both Canada's largest export market for frozen potato products and a major source of fresh table stock during the summer gap. Two trade policy developments materially shape pricing at the Edmonton shelf.
First, the 2021–2022 Prince Edward Island potato wart dispute saw the United States Department of Agriculture suspend imports of PEI table potatoes from November 2021 through April 2022 over concerns about Synchytrium endobioticum, the fungal pathogen that causes potato wart. While that dispute primarily redirected PEI supply into Canadian markets — pushing fresh prices down briefly in eastern Canada — it also accelerated Canadian Food Inspection Agency investment in surveillance and traceability, costs which are now embedded in Canadian fresh packing operations nationwide. As of late 2024 the CFIA continues to operate under a Ministerial Order requiring soil testing and movement controls for PEI seed potatoes, with downstream cost implications for any province importing PEI seed.
Second, Canada and the U.S. have a long-running anti-dumping and countervailing duties dispute over fresh potatoes from Washington State entering British Columbia. The Canadian International Trade Tribunal's existing finding on whole potatoes from the Pacific Northwest, originally issued in the 1980s and renewed multiple times since, imposes anti-dumping duties on certain U.S. fresh potatoes shipped into B.C. when import prices fall below an established "normal value." The most recent expiry review continued the finding into the late 2020s. This measure does not apply directly to Alberta, but it shapes the geography of U.S. imports during the summer gap, with more product moving into Alberta and Saskatchewan via overland routes from Washington and Idaho rather than through B.C. ports of entry.
Tariff activity earlier in 2025 — the 25% Canadian counter-tariffs on roughly $30 billion of U.S. goods imposed in March 2025 and largely removed as of September 1, 2025 — did not target fresh or processed potatoes specifically, but did introduce a period of cost uncertainty for U.S.-sourced potato products and packaging inputs, and contributed to broader produce inflation in the first half of the year.
The Alberta potato crop is planted between late April and late May, with harvest running from August through early October. Yields and grade are highly sensitive to summer heat, smoke, and drought, all of which have become more frequent in southern Alberta over the last decade. The 2021 prairie heat dome reduced average Alberta yields meaningfully and tightened the 2021–2022 storage supply, contributing to elevated fresh potato prices through that winter. The 2023 wildfire smoke season and persistent drought in the Oldman watershed similarly stressed the crop and forced some growers to reduce irrigated acreage in 2024. Storage losses in cold-stored Russet Burbank lots, which run between 5 and 15 percent depending on conditions, are an additional source of supply variability that emerges late in the storage season — typically March through May, when Edmonton retail prices for fresh potatoes tend to drift upward.
Conversely, a strong harvest year in southern Alberta, paired with adequate processor contract capacity, tends to produce the lowest retail prices of the year in October and November, when new-crop product is moving in volume and storage costs have not yet accumulated.
Fresh table potatoes are washed, graded, and packed at regional packing sheds typically located within 100 kilometres of the field. From there they move through retailer distribution centres — Loblaw operates a major DC in Calgary and another in Edmonton; Sobeys operates a western DC in Sherwood Park; Walmart Canada and Costco operate their own western distribution networks. Storage potatoes are held in climate-controlled bulk storage at the grower or packer level rather than at the DC, which means storage cost is a grower expense embedded in the wholesale price rather than a retailer cost.
Edmonton's relative proximity to the southern Alberta growing belt (roughly 500 kilometres from Lethbridge) is a meaningful structural advantage: shipping costs per kilogram for fresh potatoes are low compared with lettuce, berries, or other higher-value produce, but the fixed cost of a multi-stop refrigerated route is non-trivial, and Alberta retailers pay less of that fixed cost per kilogram than retailers further from the source.
Retail fresh potato prices in Edmonton are shaped most strongly by three things: the quality and size of the southern Alberta crop, the share of that crop committed to processor contracts, and the timing and origin of summer-gap U.S. imports. With McCain's Coaldale expansion drawing additional contract acreage and Lamb Weston and Cavendish maintaining their Alberta footprints, processing demand is expected to remain firm through the late 2020s. This supports grower revenue but also means table stock supply remains tied to whatever acreage processors do not contract for in any given year.
Production input costs — diesel, nitrogen fertilizer, and irrigation power — moderated through 2024 and into 2025 after the highs of 2022, but seed potato costs and CFIA compliance overhead remain structurally higher than they were before the PEI potato wart dispute. The net effect is a fresh potato category in which underlying wholesale prices have stabilized but remain above pre-2021 levels, with retail prices most likely to spike during the summer import gap and during late-storage drawdown in the spring.
- Statistics Canada — Potato Production, November 2024 estimates: https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/daily-quotidien/241204/dq241204c-eng.htm
- Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada — Canadian Potato Industry Profile: https://agriculture.canada.ca/en/sector/horticulture/reports/canadian-potato-industry
- United Potato Growers of Canada — Production and Market Reports: https://www.unitedpotatocanada.com/
- Potato Growers of Alberta — Industry Statistics: https://albertapotatoes.ca/
- McCain Foods — Coaldale Expansion Announcement (June 2023): https://www.mccain.com/media/news/mccain-foods-announces-canadian-investment-of-cad-600-million-to-double-french-fry-processing-at-coaldale-alberta-facility/
- Cavendish Farms — Operations: https://www.cavendishfarms.com/en-ca/about-us/
- Lamb Weston — Taber Facility and 2023 Expansion: https://www.lambweston.com/about/news
- Canadian Food Inspection Agency — Potato Wart and PEI Surveillance: https://inspection.canada.ca/en/plant-health/potatoes/potato-diseases/potato-wart
- Canadian International Trade Tribunal — Whole Potatoes from the United States, Expiry Review: https://www.citt-tcce.gc.ca/en/inquiries/expiry-reviews
- Government of Canada — Canada's Response to U.S. Tariffs (September 2025 Update): https://www.canada.ca/en/department-finance/programs/international-trade-finance-policy/canadas-response-us-tariffs.html
- Government of Alberta — Crop Reports and Potato Acreage: https://www.alberta.ca/agriculture-statistics-yearbook
- USDA Foreign Agricultural Service — Canada Fresh and Processed Potato Annual: https://fas.usda.gov/data/canada-potatoes-and-potato-products-annual