Suraj Red Lentils
Track prices for Suraj red lentils.
Retail Red Lentils: Supply Chain Overview - Edmonton, Alberta
Red lentils sold at Canadian retail are an almost entirely domestic product. Canada is the world's largest producer and exporter of lentils, accounting for roughly 24 percent of global pulse trade, and Saskatchewan accounts for approximately 87 percent of Canadian lentil acres in 2025. Alberta accounts for the bulk of the remainder, meaning that for an Edmonton retailer, the supply base is effectively contiguous to the market and connected by direct rail and highway corridors.
For 2025-26, Canadian red lentil production was approximately 1.8 million tonnes, with red lentils representing 49 percent of total lentil acres, down from 61 percent in 2024 as growers shifted some acres to large green lentils on relative price signals. Even with the rotation, red lentils remain the volume product driving processor utilization in Western Canada.
Saskatchewan and Alberta lentils are seeded in early May, once the soil temperature at seeding depth is above 5°C. The crop flowers in mid-summer and is harvested in August, when seed moisture content drops at or below 13 percent. The pack window is therefore narrow and weather-dependent: hot, dry conditions during flowering can cause flower blast and yield loss, while a wet August delays harvest and can push grade downward. Because the crop is harvested once a year and drawn down over the following twelve months, ex-farm and processor pricing is highly sensitive to acreage announcements in March, growing-season weather reports in July, and the early harvest read in late August. Retail price moves through the year reflect this annual cycle layered with currency and export demand.
Whole red lentils as harvested have a thin red seed coat over a yellow cotyledon. Most retail and export red lentils are sold as football-cut or split, dehulled product, which requires a dedicated processing step beyond cleaning and grading. AGT Food and Ingredients, headquartered in Regina, operates what is reported to be the largest pulse-splitting facility in the western hemisphere; lentils are skinned, split in half, polished, and packaged for retail or container export from this and similar Western Canadian plants. Other processors including Adascan Grain and a network of Saskatchewan splitters compete for raw product from the same farm gate.
The Suraj line carried by Loblaw banners (Real Canadian Superstore, No Frills, Wholesale Club, Zehrs) is labelled as prepared in Canada, which is consistent with this domestic splitting and bagging model rather than imported finished product. Loblaw markets Suraj under its Apni Dukaan South Asian assortment, and the 1.8 kg pack format reflects pricing for South Asian household consumption rather than the smaller bag formats found elsewhere in the dry goods aisle. The result is a product where farm, processor, and retailer are all within Canada and the supply chain costs are dominated by the splitting step, freight, and packaging rather than by ocean shipping.
Although the supply chain for the bag on the shelf is domestic, the retail price is set against export-driven world prices because the overwhelming majority of Western Canadian red lentils are exported. AAFC expects total Canadian lentil exports of approximately 2.1 million tonnes for 2024-25 and 2025-26. The dominant destinations are India (around 650,000 tonnes anticipated for 2024-25), Turkey (around 325,000 tonnes), and the United Arab Emirates (around 220,000 tonnes). India in particular sets the marginal price for red lentils because it is by far the largest dal market, and Indian buying decisions move world prices within days.
Edmonton retail prices therefore track export parity at Vancouver minus inland freight back to Alberta, plus the processor split margin and packaging. When global red lentil demand strengthens, domestic retail tends to firm even though the product never leaves the country. When export demand softens, processors pivot more volume toward domestic retail and food service, and retail pricing eases.
The single largest policy variable for red lentil pricing is the Indian import tariff regime. India operated a duty-free window on lentil imports through May 31, 2025, which had supported strong Canadian and Australian shipments. In late March 2025 India announced a 10 percent import duty on lentils, reintroducing a tariff after several years of duty-free access. As of early 2026, analysts widely expect the duty to rise to 30 percent effective April 1, 2026, mirroring the 30 percent duty already imposed on yellow peas for shipments with a bill of lading on or after November 1, 2025.
A move from 10 percent to 30 percent is consequential. Industry estimates suggest a 30 percent duty translates to roughly $710 per tonne landed cost in inland Indian markets after additional clearance and transport, which would compress Canadian f.o.b. prices as Indian importers push the duty back onto origin. For Edmonton retail, the directional effect is downward on shelf price if the increase materializes, because displaced export volume returns to the domestic market and processors compete harder for retail and food service placements. The opposite is also true: any extension of Indian duty-free or reduced-duty access tightens domestic supply and firms retail prices.
Australia is the other major red lentil exporter and is the principal competitor to Canada in India and the Middle East. Australian harvest timing in November to January is offset from the Canadian August harvest, and the two origins effectively share the global red lentil shelf year-round. Russian and Kazakh expansion has added competitive pressure into Turkey specifically, which is relevant because Turkish demand for Canadian product is the most important non-India outlet for diversification away from Indian tariff risk.
Edmonton's position in this supply chain is unusually favourable compared to most imported food categories. The crop is grown in adjacent provinces, processed in Regina and other Saskatchewan facilities, and moved by truck or rail directly into Alberta distribution centres. There is no ocean leg, no port congestion exposure, and no cold chain requirement, since red lentils are a shelf-stable dry commodity. The cost stack at retail is therefore dominated by farm-gate price, splitting and dehulling cost, packaging, inland freight, and retailer margin, with no significant exchange rate or tariff exposure on the inbound leg.
The exchange rate still matters indirectly: a weaker Canadian dollar lifts export bids, pulls more product into containers, and tightens the domestic supply available for retail bagging. A stronger Canadian dollar has the opposite effect.
Three factors are likely to dominate red lentil retail pricing in Edmonton over the coming year: the India tariff decision and any subsequent extensions or modifications, Saskatchewan growing-season weather through July and August, and the relative strength of Turkish and UAE demand as the diversification outlets to India. Domestic retail pricing has structural support from the export role of the crop, but the supply chain is short, transparent, and heavily concentrated in a single province, which makes red lentils one of the lower-risk staple categories on the Edmonton shelf from a logistics standpoint. The dominant risk is policy, not infrastructure.
- Saskatchewan Pulse Growers — Outlook for Canadian Peas & Lentils: https://saskpulse.com/resources/outlook-for-canadian-peas-lentils-2/
- Saskatchewan Pulse Growers — Seeded Acreage Report: https://saskpulse.com/resources/seeded-acreage-report-for-canadian-peas-lentils/
- Saskatchewan Pulse Growers — Lentil Seeding: https://saskpulse.com/growing-pulses/lentils/lentils-seeding/
- Saskatchewan Pulse Growers — Lentil Harvest: https://saskpulse.com/growing-pulses/lentils/lentils-harvest/
- The Western Producer — Canada Needs Strong Global Lentil Demand 2025-26: https://www.producer.com/news/canada-needs-strong-global-lentil-demand-in-2025-26/
- The Western Producer — India Expected to Increase Lentil Import Duty: https://www.producer.com/crops/india-expected-to-increase-its-lentil-import-duty/
- The Western Producer — India Slaps 30% Import Duty on Yellow Peas: https://www.producer.com/crops/india-slaps-30-per-cent-import-duty-on-yellow-peas/
- The Western Producer — India Extends Lentil Tariff Exemption: https://www.producer.com/news/india-extends-lentil-tariff-exemption/
- Grainews — India Likely to Triple Lentil Import Duty: https://www.grainews.ca/news/india-likely-to-triple-lentil-import-duty/
- Government of Canada — Outlook for Principal Field Crops: https://agriculture.canada.ca/en/sector/crops/reports-statistics/canada-outlook-principal-field-crops-2025-12-17
- Government of Saskatchewan — Red Lentils: 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/red-lentils
- AGT Foods: https://www.agtfoods.com/
- Pulse Canada — How India Helped Canada's Pulse Industry: https://pulsecanada.com/news/2024-05-08-how-india-helped-canadas-pulse-industry-realize-its-potential
- Real Canadian Superstore — Apni Dukaan South Asian Assortment: https://www.realcanadiansuperstore.ca/en/collection/apni-dukaan
- Tridge — India's Zero-Tariff Policy on Lentil Imports: https://www.tridge.com/stories/indias-zero-tariff-policy-on-lentil-imports-boosts-canadian-and-australian-trade