Leamington tomato processor to close Thursday, November 14, 2013 by SUSAN MANN The country’s largest food processing facility owned by H.J. Heinz Company of Canada LP and located in Leamington is closing leaving 46 contract tomato growers in southwestern Ontario without a market for their product. “The industry has been carved in half,” says Walter Brown, director on the Ontario Processing Vegetable Growers board. He has been a contract grower for Heinz for 47 years and he took over the contract from his father. Brown grew 180 acres of tomatoes this year. “This is devastating,” he says, noting they were hoping the plant would remain open even if it stopped taking raw tomatoes to make paste for ketchup. “All other Heinz plants buy paste from California to make their ketchup.” Brown says he’s left without a choice and will have to grow more grains now that Heinz is closing. There isn’t another plant in Ontario that can take the amount of tomatoes Heinz’s growers were producing. American entrepreneur Warren Buffet’s Berkshire Hathaway and 3G Capital, made up of Brazilian investors, bought Heinz this year. Brown says they were told by a very reliable source Wednesday that the plant is closing. The company was to tell employees at a meeting this afternoon. The company was to issue a news release, he says and until “there is a news release that spells out exactly what they’re doing nothing is sure.” In a typical year, Heinz contracts to buy about 230,000 tons of tomatoes but this growing season “was the worst growing year ever,” he notes. “As far as delivering the percentage of contracted tomatoes, it was the worst ever.” The tomatoes are used to make ketchup and juice. The announcement of the closure isn’t totally unexpected, Brown says. The Leamington plant was the only one of Heinz’s facilities in the world that converted raw tomatoes into paste and that “kept us thinking when would the shoe drop.” Heinz has closed other facilities around the world that used raw tomatoes to make paste. The Leamington plant is the second largest Heinz plant in the world and has been operating for 104 years. It employs 750 unionized workers, 150 salaried staff and 340 to 360 seasonal staff. It mainly supplies the Canadian market but also ships some products to the United States. From 2008 to 2012, an average of 13,377 acres of tomatoes were grown for processing with an average farm gate value of $54.5 million. Brown says growers in Essex and Kent produce more than 500,000 tons of tomatoes for processing annually and Heinz has taken almost half of the production. “When you’re cutting the production almost in half, it’s gigantic. It guts the industry big time.” Joan Patterson, Heinz corporate affairs leader, couldn’t be reached for comment. BF Heinz plant closure expected to have widespread economic impact 'He used my chartered accountant's designation to establish credibility'
Ag community wanted for cover crop survey Saturday, January 17, 2026 Researchers from Manitoba and Ontario are looking for members of ag communities from Alberta to Ontario to participate in a questionnaire about cover crops. The confidential survey is open to any farm type and size whether the operation has ever grown cover crops. “We don’t just want... Read this article online
Canada Negotiates Tariff Reductions on Canola Seed by China Friday, January 16, 2026 Mark Carneyhas concluded hisvisittoBeijing for high-level meetings with Chinese leaders, includingXi Jinping. The visit marked the first trip to China by a Canadian prime minister since 2017 and resulted in a joint statement outlining a new strategic partnership between the two... Read this article online
Bushel Plus rebrands to BranValt for global harvest-tech growth Thursday, January 15, 2026 Bushel Plus Ltd., a well‑known name in harvest optimization tools and training, is preparing for a major brand transformation as it shifts to a new global identity: BranValt. The company recently announced that the transition will officially take effect in July 2026, marking a... Read this article online
Loveland launches AQUA FORCE to boost water efficiency in pivot-irrigated fields Tuesday, January 13, 2026 Loveland Products, Inc. has introduced AQUA FORCE, a new water‑use‑efficiency product built specifically for center pivot irrigation systems and designed to help farmers get more value from every inch of applied water. Unlike traditional surfactants or wetting agents, is formulated to move water... Read this article online
New program supports Canadian farmers with succession planning Tuesday, January 13, 2026 A new program is available to help Canadian farm families on their succession plan journeys. Groundworks is a collaborative effort between the Canadian Centre for Agricultural Wellbeing, AgriRisk Managers, and Loft32, along with support from AAFC. The program supports farmers with... Read this article online