Spain has reported a double-digit rise in its export figures. Spanish exports of live plants and flowers increased by 11 per cent in 2017 compared to 2016, to a total of EUR 362.7 mio. There was a notable improvement in live plants, the sector's main export, up 11 per cent to EUR 303.1 mio, according to figures published by the Directorate-General of Customs.
Export sales of live plants showed an improvement in outdoor plants, worth EUR 116.3 mio, while indoor plants were up 8 per cent and worth EUR 54.9 mio. Tree and shrub exports rose by 24 per cent to EUR 50.4 mio.
Cut flower exports also rallied in 2017, climbing 4 per cent over 2016 sales to a total of EUR 40.3 mio. This success was mainly due to healthy growth in rose sales, which were worth EUR 9.7 mio, 271 per cent more than the previous year. However, carnations, Spain's leading cut flower export, were down by 43 per cent to EUR 11.2 mio.
The sector's other leading exports, bulbs and foliage, also did better in 2017 than in 2016, with bulbs up 44 per cent to EUR 4.5 mio, and foliage by 19 per cent to 14.7 per cent mio.
The countries that import most of Spain's live flowers and plants are France, the Netherlands, Portugal and Italy. France is still the main destination market, but it only grew by 2 per cent in 2017, a lower figure than other countries. Exports to the Netherlands increased to EUR 54.1 mio (+13 per cent), while Spain sold EUR 33.5 mio worth of live plants and flowers to Portugal, and EUR 30.9 mio to Italy, an…