CUT FLOWER

Unseasonal cold damages Chinese flower harvest, prices spike

9 January 2014

Yields have fallen sharply after Kunming, the provincial capital also known as "Spring City", had its heaviest snowfall in ten years on 15 Dec, sending the mercury below freezing. While many people were celebrating Christmas Day on Wednesday, Yunnan farmers were lamenting the irreparable frost damage to 9,330 hectares on which flowers are grown, one-sixth of the province's flower-growing area.

According to the Yunnan Department of Agriculture, the direct economic loss will be 228 million yuan (USD $37.6 million). 

Li Shuquan, a flower farmer in Qujing, said he and many neighbours had built makeshift greenhouses with thin plastic film, but they were not enough to protect the flowers against the snow and frost. "The plastic protective film became red after the roses withered and lost colour. The roses on two hectares are dead now," the 45-year-old said. "My family will have no income this season, and we've lost about 80,000 yuan. All we can hope for now is a good harvest in March."

He said no one expected such cold weather in Yunnan, because the province usually enjoys a warmer climate in winter, making it perfect for growing flowers and fruit. 

In cities such as Qujing and Pu'er, agricultural technicians helped farmers by watering trees during the day to slow down the temperature drops at night. 

"Some varieties were simply killed by the frost," said Zhang Li, deputy general manager of the Dounan International Flower Market, in Kunming's Chenggong district. "About 1.6 million to 1.8 million flowers were traded each day at my market before the snow. Now only 600,000 to 700,000 flowers are being transported to market."

He said the shortage in supply tripled the wholesale prices for most flowers by 14 December: roses were going for 6.88 yuan each on Thursday, compared with less than 2 yuan during the first two weeks of that month. 

The effect brought flower prices under the spotlight in other major cities, including Beijing, Nanjing and Hefei. 

Hu Shiwen, a trader at Runfeng Flower Market in Hefei, Anhui province, said his profit margin for roses had been cut at least thirty percent because of the higher prices and the shortage. "The highest price acceptable for consumers is about 70 or 80 yuan a bunch, or 7 yuan each. Otherwise, people just give up and turn to other presents for friends and family," he said. 

The effect of the snowfall in Southwest China was felt in Shanghai, too.

"Most of the flowers are at least twice as expensive due to the extreme weather in Yunnan, and we've been forced to accept much lower profits than before," said Wei Xiao, a sales assistant at a flower shop in the city.

Gu Yidan, founder of Chujia Flower Shop in Guangzhou, said: "The price of red roses increased five times compared with the previous year, while the prices of other flowers doubled or tripled." 

Yunnan also exports flowers to Southeast Asia and Russia, where the prices might also see a dramatic increase due to diminished supplies, said Zhang of the Dounan International Flower Market. 

He predicted that prices would remain high until March, when the new season of flowers goes to market. 

Source: http://english.people.com.cn