Spring of 2024 brought a harsh shock to Russian consumers as potato prices skyrocketed, with imported varieties reaching 150 rubles per kilogram—five times higher than just a year prior. While many attribute this to poor weather, farmers reveal a far more complex and troubling reality. The root cause, they argue, is a systemic failure in agricultural economics. Soaring costs for fuel, fertilizers, and spare parts have made potato farming increasingly unviable. With wholesale prices remaining stagnant, hundreds of farmers across the country chose to leave their fields unplanted rather than operate at a loss, creating a supply shortage long before the first frost or heatwave struck.
The perfect storm of 2024, however, was not solely man-made. According to Rosstat, the total potato harvest fell by 12% due to a cascade of climate anomalies, from scorching 38°C heat to relentless rains and unexpected frosts. This drop followed the paradoxical “low base effect” of 2023, when a record-breaking harvest led to such low prices that farmers discarded excess produce, disincentivizing future planting. Compounding the issue is the role of retailers, whose strict aesthetic standards for perfectly shaped potatoes result in massive waste of edible crops, and a struggling import market where traditional suppliers like Belarus kept their harvests and Egyptian logistics drive up final costs. Farmers warn that without a state program for risk insurance and subsidies, the nation’s potato supply will remain dangerously fragile.






















