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![]() by Staff Writers Naaldwijk, Netherlands (AFP) Mar 23, 2020
It's tulip season in The Netherlands but this year growers are destroying millions of flowers a day, in unprecedented scenes as the coronavirus pandemic has cut demand. Mountains of tulips, roses, chrysanthemums and other flowers destined for destruction have been waiting for the last week in the world's biggest flower market. Brightly coloured blooms that might normally have been destined for a romantic gesture or Mothers Day are scooped up by diggers and then dumped in huge skips. "The only solution is that we destroyed them," said Michel van Schie, spokesman for Royal FloraHolland, a huge auction house for flowers. "This is really the first time that we have to do this. The Dutch auction already exists for more than a hundred years, and this is the first time that we are in such a crisis," he told AFP. Royal FloraHolland said that between 70 and 80 percent of the Netherlands' total annual production of flowers is being destroyed. "This is really the first time that we have to do this. The Dutch auction already exists for more than a hundred years, and this is the first time that we are in such a crisis," he told AFP. Royal FloraHolland said that between 70 and 80 percent of the Netherlands' total annual production of flowers is being destroyed. It's a bitter blow in a country where tulips are as much a symbol of national identity as windmills, cheese and clogs The shutdown of shops and businesses caused by the coronavirus outbreak sweeping the world will have "dramatic" consequences, says Prisca Kleijn, head of the Royal Association of Bulb Producers. "We've never seen something like this before," she said. "There's no demand for flowers anymore because of the coronacrisis in the whole of Europe." The crisis has come at "the worst moment in the year" for tulip growers, she added. "We have Mothers Day coming and the tulip growers start harvesting from January until April-May so it's right in the middle of the season, when they have to earn their money," said Kleijn. With shoppers seemingly keener to stockpile essentials as the virus hits, the association said it was starting a campaign encouraging customers to "buy flowers, not toilet paper."
![]() ![]() Urban land could grow fruit and veg for 15 per cent of the population, research shows Sheffield UK (SPX) Mar 18, 2020 Growing fruit and vegetables in just 10 per cent of a city's gardens and other urban green spaces could provide 15 per cent of the local population with their 'five a day', according to new research. In a study published in Nature Food, academics from the Institute for Sustainable Food at the University of Sheffield investigated the potential for urban horticulture by mapping green spaces and grey spaces across the city. They found that green spaces including parks, gardens, allotments, road ... read more
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