Modern blueberry processing plant opens 1 year ahead of schedule
Acadian Wild Blueberry Co. executive says early opening is to help meet demand for increased capacity
The grand opening ofAcadian Wild Blueberry Co.'s processing plant was held inSaint-IsidoreonTuesday, a full year ahead of the expected opening date.
The push to open sooner wasto meet the demand for increased processing capacity from local blueberry growers, said John Bragg, president and co-CEO of the parent company, Oxford Frozen Foods.
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"Our company has invested more than $70 million in the local community over the last three years, primarily to service our growers," said Bragg.
The company currentlyemploys70 full-time workers and more than 200 seasonal workers. More jobs are expected to be created as more land comes into production over the next several years.
Modern facility
The plant is considered to be themost modern blueberry processing facility in the world.
It will have two freezing tunnels thatcan process up to 1.5 million pounds of fresh blueberries per day during the harvest season. The cold storage can hold45 million pounds of product.
"This new facility will help the Acadian Wild Blueberry Co. increase its competitiveness and its exports, which, in turn, will create jobs," saidEconomic Development Minister FrancineLandry."The jobs created at the new plant will greatly help the families and the economy in the region."
The provincial government contributed a $37.5 million interest-bearing repayable loan towardthe construction of the processing plant.
Producers upset
In 2013, the New Brunswickgovernment came under firefor agreeing to exchange withNova Scotia-based OxfordFrozen Foods Ltd., 6,285 hectares of Crown land for an equal amount of private land to allow construction of a new processing facility on the Acadian Peninsula.
"Put in place a processing plant where, basically, Acadians will no longer have the options of developing farms on Crown land but our options will be to sort and pack berries in processing plants for Oxford Frozen Foods," spokespersonJean-Maurice Landry said at the time.
He addedlocal growers wanted more control and at the time said they had a proposal into thegovernment to put together a co-op to manage Crown land.
When reached to get a reaction on the plant's opening, Landry said, "It's a plus for the industry because there was a lack of freezing capacity, however it's an awful price for the province to pay to get such facilities because we lost in the deal 16,000 acres of prime blueberry land to the benefit of Oxford.
And a lot of government money went into something that solved only part of the problem because we're still as a region left without much processing capacity."
More than 300 farm families are currently involved in New Brunswick's wild blueberry industry. Blueberry production providesabout 360 full-time jobs and about $11 million in labour income, according to the government.