Jobs to go as tomato industry shuts down

Friday 7th November 2008, 2:59PM GMT.

00599787_cropped.jpgDOZENS of workers in Jersey’s historic tomato export industry are to be made redundant over the coming months as growers close their doors for the last time.

Earlier this year, the JEP revealed that every tomato exporter was to cease trading after being forced out of the market by soaring energy costs and ruthless supermarkets which are seeking to reduce the amount they pay for the product.

Now Jersey’s glasshouses are beginning to close after exporting 2008’s entire crop. Harmony Produce, which has been growing tomatoes for 40 years, will make 32 staff redundant by the end of the month. It has exported millions of tomato-es to the UK over the years, and for the past three years has been exporting 1.5 million punnets to 1,000 Tesco stores each season. It exported its final batch on Tuesday, and these will be sold in Tesco during the weekend.

Owner Kevin Hervé (pictured) now plans to demolish his glasshouse in St Clement and submit a planning application to build football pitches, netball courts, a car park and 28 houses on the site.


  1. 1
    Bruce Labey

    Some of the best growers in Europe, an industry that lead the world in terms of technology and productivity – all gone because Oxera, and therefore the States, believes that any public money invested in anything but the promotion of the finance industry is money wasted.

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  2. 2
    Keith Dods

    Well said Bruce, couldn’t agree more. When will our “Leaders” learn! Too late now!

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  3. 3
    Angel

    I think it is terrible….it is not a case of IF but more of WHEN the UK and Europe close ranks and decide Jersey is no longer viable to them Jersey will not be sustainable because they will have shut down everything that grows for what flows….*money instead of goods* and you can not survive on money alone as when the boats don’t come in neither does the food…the third world is coming to a place near you!

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  4. 4
    PJG

    At the moment a lot of jerseys local population are being paid high wages by the finance industry.
    Our youth is being employed by this industry that invests in education of locals and does not seek dispensation to employ workers from abroad at minimum wage
    What were tomato workers being paid ?
    How many locals were being employed by them ?
    What education for the local youth were the tomato employers investing in Jerseys future ?

    Lets not throw our tax pounds at a failing industry lets make hay while the sun shines and use the acumalated wealth to face the future as it happens, unless someone has a reliable christal ball that is.

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