It's not delivery, it's discontinued: Nestl to stop selling Delissio pizza in Canada - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 01:26 PM | Calgary | -10.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Business

It's not delivery, it's discontinued: Nestl to stop selling Delissio pizza in Canada

Several well-known frozen food brands, including Delissio pizza, will disappear from Canadian stores over the next six months as Nestl shifts its focus to other products.

Stouffer's, Lean Cuisine among other frozen food brands set to disappear from stores over next 6 months

Green and purple boxes of frozen pizza stacked in a freezer.
Delissio frozen pizzas are seen at a Toronto grocery store on Thursday. Nestl Canada says it is winding down its frozen meals and pizza business in Canada over the next six months. (Joe O'Connal/The Canadian Press)

Nestl Canada says it is winding down its frozen meals and pizza business in Canada over the next six months.

The four brands that will no longer be sold in the freezer aisle at Canadian grocery stores are Delissio, Stouffer's, Lean Cuisine and Life Cuisine.

The company says it is focusing on categories that support long-term business growth, including confectionery, coffee, ice cream, premium water and pet food.

Nestl Canada president and CEO John Carmichael says this decision will allow the company to further invest in the categories it's prioritizing.

The company does not manufacture these products in Canada, so no manufacturing facilities in Canada will be affected.

Nestl says it will work with its retail partners to facilitate the exit of these products from stores.

Several red and black boxes of Stouffer's 'Cheddar Cheeseburger' product.
Stouffer's frozen meals are one of several brands that will no longer be sold in Canada, as Nestl pivots its focus to other food items. (Joe O'Connal/The Canadian Press)

Manufacturers 'refocusing'

Lenore Newman,director of the Food and Agriculture Institute at the University of the Fraser Valley in B.C., says Nestl'smove is part of a bigger trend of manufacturers pulling back from Canada and some other markets amid increased shipping costs and stretched supply lines.

"[The frozen products]are made in the U.S. and shipped north,and it looks like they're refocusing onthe products that are actually are made here. It's an interesting trend, in that we're seeing sort of a slowing of the movement of food," she said.

She points to a recentlettuce shortage in Canada, after a major producerin California suffereddrought and an outbreak of disease in its lettuce crops, resulting inreduced exports and higher prices.

Newman warns that Canada is likely to see more product disruptions and, potentially, fewerspecialty products being importedas supply chain uncertainties continue.

"What we really have to focus on is building our domestic supply lines to replace lostproducts, or the grocery store could get kind of boring after a while."

With files from CBC's Meegan Read