The Prague Post - Pandemic sets sales of microwavable popcorn a-pinging

EUR -
AED 4.251875
AFN 79.977349
ALL 97.574407
AMD 444.555592
ANG 2.071771
AOA 1061.526715
ARS 1460.31657
AUD 1.792111
AWG 2.083695
AZN 1.967471
BAM 1.954269
BBD 2.337469
BDT 140.539906
BGN 1.953881
BHD 0.436409
BIF 3449.897476
BMD 1.157608
BND 1.489433
BOB 7.999802
BRL 6.467445
BSD 1.157703
BTN 99.624818
BWP 15.639883
BYN 3.788632
BYR 22689.120169
BZD 2.325498
CAD 1.593419
CDF 3340.857025
CHF 0.932077
CLF 0.029189
CLP 1120.124581
CNY 8.31046
CNH 8.319742
COP 4647.912571
CRC 584.147446
CUC 1.157608
CUP 30.676617
CVE 110.17869
CZK 24.634826
DJF 206.161172
DKK 7.462741
DOP 69.645442
DZD 150.959052
EGP 57.198232
ERN 17.364123
ETB 160.673822
FJD 2.621461
FKP 0.862211
GBP 0.864374
GEL 3.137261
GGP 0.862211
GHS 12.06865
GIP 0.862211
GMD 82.773031
GNF 10046.130227
GTQ 8.883041
GYD 242.113474
HKD 9.085945
HNL 30.298265
HRK 7.535721
HTG 152.000928
HUF 399.166648
IDR 18927.125132
ILS 3.889239
IMP 0.862211
INR 99.665086
IQD 1516.611941
IRR 48764.243764
ISK 141.745126
JEP 0.862211
JMD 185.594612
JOD 0.820722
JPY 172.244571
KES 149.560939
KGS 101.232549
KHR 4640.404962
KMF 489.957525
KPW 1041.811554
KRW 1614.365421
KWD 0.35395
KYD 0.964753
KZT 618.290994
LAK 24965.658478
LBP 103730.237582
LKR 348.896687
LRD 232.120171
LSL 20.729361
LTL 3.418116
LVL 0.700225
LYD 6.296068
MAD 10.492281
MDL 19.680753
MGA 5175.990031
MKD 61.511814
MMK 2429.790684
MNT 4151.491855
MOP 9.359789
MRU 46.052924
MUR 52.925977
MVR 17.823837
MWK 2007.453446
MXN 21.786903
MYR 4.915783
MZN 74.040021
NAD 20.729361
NGN 1770.897275
NIO 42.606624
NOK 11.96498
NPR 159.398133
NZD 1.958748
OMR 0.445099
PAB 1.157703
PEN 4.106883
PGK 4.86419
PHP 66.29271
PKR 329.826726
PLN 4.255115
PYG 8960.980294
QAR 4.221093
RON 5.073461
RSD 117.152283
RUB 90.584435
RWF 1663.711081
SAR 4.341987
SBD 9.614792
SCR 16.99834
SDG 695.143539
SEK 11.311331
SGD 1.490033
SHP 0.909698
SLE 26.219151
SLL 24274.469129
SOS 661.587452
SRD 42.974466
STD 23960.151957
SVC 10.130064
SYP 15051.044508
SZL 20.725764
THB 37.673188
TJS 11.067673
TMT 4.063205
TND 3.409829
TOP 2.711237
TRY 46.63318
TTD 7.858912
TWD 34.082264
TZS 3021.357697
UAH 48.467432
UGX 4147.750803
USD 1.157608
UYU 46.833312
UZS 14793.41138
VES 135.399584
VND 30283.029777
VUV 138.491433
WST 3.195153
XAF 655.449207
XAG 0.030553
XAU 0.000348
XCD 3.128494
XDR 0.812399
XOF 655.443549
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.389174
ZAR 20.726515
ZMK 10419.865027
ZMW 27.061035
ZWL 372.749359
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

Pandemic sets sales of microwavable popcorn a-pinging
Pandemic sets sales of microwavable popcorn a-pinging

Pandemic sets sales of microwavable popcorn a-pinging

While the closure of cinemas during the pandemic has eaten into popcorn sales, demand for the microwavable form of the popular snack has reached new records, according to Europe's biggest producer.

Text size:

Natais is a small family-run company nestled in the rolling hills of southwest France, with the snow-capped Pyrenees visible in the distance.

Set up by its current chief executive Michael Ehmann in 1994, the popcorn maker employs a workforce of 140 and, with annual sales of 65 million euros ($75 million), currently commands a share of nearly 40 percent of the European market.

It supplies more than 80 percent of France's cinemas, but overseas sales account for more than 90 percent of annual turnover and Natais exports to more than 50 countries, including its main markets of Britain, Romania, Germany and Spain.

At the factory's towering silos visible from miles around, fully automated production lines fill up to 300 bags of microwavable popcorn per minute, while others fill sacks -- ranging in size from 25 kilograms to 930 kilograms (55 pounds to 2,050 pounds) -- of popcorn destined for cinemas.

"The health crisis has had negative consequences for our network of suppliers to cinemas, but also positive consequences, because sales of microwavable popcorn have risen sharply," Ehmann told AFP.

Last year indeed saw sales of microwavable bags taking off, according to sales director Helene Ricau.

"The market was already expanding in Europe, but with the health crisis, microwavable popcorn has exploded," she told AFP.

"During the lockdowns, people discovered popcorn as a sort of comfort food in these gloomy times."

Natais sold more than 200 million bags of popcorn in Europe in 2020 and 207 million in 2021, Ricau said.

"We're targeting annual growth rates of 4.0-5.0 percent in the coming years. Unlike in the US, the market has not yet reached maturity in Europe," she said.

- Ecological agriculture -

Natais cooperates with 220 farmers, including 28 who work on an ecological basis.

While some of the farmers are in South Africa to ensure supplies across the whole year, the majority are local.

One of them, Pierre Alem, said his family has tilled the soil since the French Revolution.

His 199-hectare (490-acre) farm grows not only popcorn corn, but also rapeseed, barley, sunflowers, and corn for animal feed.

Alem said his father first started growing popcorn corn in 2008 on around 20 hectares, but has since more than doubled the surface area which now yields around 200 tonnes each year.

Natais provides the seeds and pays him to grow grain and vegetables in between harvests, an ecological form of agriculture that seeks to "capture carbon in the soil... and prevent erosion," Alem said.

But popcorn corn "brings more added value compared to corn for animal feed", he said.

It hasn't been only the closure of cinemas that has eaten into sales, but once they were reopened many countries required spectators to wear their masks throughout the film and snacks were banned.

At a cinema in Blagnac, near Toulouse, 16-year-old high school student Rayan Aguilar complains that he hasn't been able to eat popcorn while watching a film.

"Cinema without popcorn, it's weird," he says, impatient for the lifting of the ban in France next week.

The manager of the 15-screen multiplex, Jean-Baptiste Salvat, said that turnover had fallen by 20-30 percent as a direct result of the ban.

"Popcorn is one of the top products at the confectionery counter," he said.

O.Holub--TPP