Supermarkets are ALREADY selling festive products – before Halloween

Supermarkets are ALREADY selling festive products with shoppers urged to buy now and ‘stock up’ amid fears over Christmas food shortage due to gas crisis

  • Tesco, Sainsbury’s, Marks and Spencer and Co-Op are selling Christmas items
  • Typically supermarkets begin stocking their Christmas products after Halloween
  • But mince pies, chocolate boxes and Christmas cakes are now already on sale
  • It comes amid fears of a CO2 gas shortage following closure of fertiliser plants
  • CO2 is pumped in drinks like pints, fizzy drinks and used as part of meat industry 

Supermarkets are putting out their Christmas goods three months early amid fears that turkey dinners could be cancelled due to shortages.

In a literal twist on the phrase ‘it’s Christmas come early’, shoppers have spotted a surprising number of shelves stocked with festive products.

Tesco, Sainsbury’s, Marks and Spencer and Co-Op have already started putting out Christmas items in their stores.

Typically, Christmas items begin appearing after supermarkets have shifted their Halloween stock.

But with Halloween still more than a month away, shoppers have questioned why supermarkets are now selling Christmas items.

Some shoppers have even suggested it is being used as a creative way to cover-up empty shelves.

It comes as today the owner of the UK’s biggest poultry supplier said Christmas dinners could be ‘cancelled’ this year due to a shortage of CO2 used in the supply chain.

However Alok Sharma this morning attempted to calm fears of food shortages caused by a fuel crisis, insisting there was no ‘immediate concern’ and that the public could be ‘confident’ there was no threat to Christmas dinners. 

Tesco, Sainsbury’s, Marks and Spencer (pictured: Christmas items on sale at Marks and Spencer in Bristol) and Co-Op have already started putting out Christmas items on their shelves

Sainsbury’s and Coop stores have been pictured with shelves full to the brim with mince pies, advent calendars and festive chocolates

Tesco’s South Queensferry branch in Edinburgh was today pictured displaying a sign that read: ‘Stock up early’

Christmas magazines for sale at Co-Op Food store, in Bestwood Park, Nottingham

Christmas Percy Pig cakes are being sold at Marks and Spencer in Broadmead Shopping Quarter in Bristol

How CO2 gas prices are affecting meat industry 

The problems facing meat producers are a by-product of rising natural gas prices, even though the substance is not even used by the industry directly. 

Their problem is carbon dioxide. This gas is used both in abattoirs as part of the stunning process and, as ‘dry ice’ to keep food chilled/frozen and fresh on its way to consumers.

But the industry sources its CO2 from two fertiliser plants in in Teesside and Cheshire, where it is created as a by-product of manufacturing soil food and sold off. 

As well as the meat industry it is also used to make fizzy drinks fizzy – including beer.

These two plants use natural gas in their main fertiliser business. What the price spike has done is made this business uneconomical – the fertiliser is too expensive to produce. 

So their owner , US firm CF Industries, closed them down last week. 

But they between them produce around 60 per cent of Britain’s industrial CO2. 

What this means is that as supplies dwindle in the coming weeks, producers could be unable to get their produce to supermarkets in a condition fit to sell because it cannot be refrigerated.

Meanwhile, Sainsbury’s and Coop stores have been pictured with shelves full to the brim with mince pies, advent calendars and festive chocolates.

Tesco’s South Queensferry branch in Edinburgh was today pictured displaying a sign that read: ‘Stock up early.’

Some shoppers have taken to social media highlighting the early arrival of Christmas puddings and mince pies.

Posting a picture of Christmas puddings, one said: ‘Penzance Tesco last Sunday.

‘I reckon they’ve put out the Christmas stock early to cover the gaps on the shelves from other short deliveries.’

A second said: ‘Our local Tesco started selling Christmas stuff already. Stack up early, they say. Maybe a clever way of hiding the empty shelves?

‘Can’t remember seeing it before Halloween. Personally I’m not quite ready for this.’

A third said: ‘Stock up early says Tesco.

‘Has anyone got the willpower to buy lots of Christmas goodies and leave them untouched until late December?’

A Tesco spokesperson said: ‘It’s a few weeks until customers are able to choose from our full range of Christmas products.

‘However, we know some of our customers like to start their shopping well in advance, so, as we do every year, we have started selling a small selection of festively-themed products in some of our stores.’

A Sainsbury’s spokesperson said: ‘Each year we stock some festive products in advance of the main Christmas period.

‘This is because some customers like to buy gifts and longer life items in plenty of time, or treat themselves early.’

A spokesperson for the Co-op said: ‘We know that many customers like to buy Christmas products early, so to satisfy demand and taste buds, we’ve started to stock our shelves now.’

Christmas puddings on display at Mark & Spencers, Broadmead Shopping Quarter, Bristol

Christmas mince pies stocked at Tesco, South Queensferry. Usually Christmas items are not put on display until later in the year

Christmas Rudolph figures for sale at Co-Op Food store, Bestwood Park, Nottingham

It comes as Alok Sharma today attempted to calm fears of food shortages caused by a fuel crisis today, insisting there was no ‘immediate concern’ and that the public could be ‘confident’ there was no threat to Christmas dinners.

The Cop26 president said ministers ‘don’t see any risks going into the winter’ from a spike in global gas prices that prompted the closure of two industrial sites vital to the food and drink industry.

Business Secretary Kwasi Kwarteng will tomorrow hold an emergency summit with energy bosses after the closure of fertiliser plants in Teesside and Cheshire.

A by-product of the fertiliser production process is the creation of carbon dioxide. 

It is used in fizzy soft drinks and beer, as well as by the meat industry to stun animals before slaughter, in food packaging to extend shelf life and to keep deliveries chilled. 

If supplies of CO2 run short, it raises the prospect of meat disappearing from supermarket shelves within weeks.

The British Meat Processors Association says it only has two weeks’ capacity.

‘The clear message that is coming out of this is that there is no immediate concern in terms of supply, we don’t see any risks going into the winter,’ Mr Sharma told Sky News’s Trevor Phillips on Sunday programme.

‘People should be confident that the supplies will be there and that we will be protecting them in terms of price rises. But of course we are not complacent about this.’

The Cop26 president said ministers ‘don’t see any risks going into the winter’ from a spike in global gas prices that prompted the closure of two industrial sites vital to the food and drink industry.

Business Secretary Kwasi Kwarteng (pictured) will tomorrow hold an emergency summit with energy bosses to thrash out a plan to fix the fuel crisis, which has sparked fears of major food shortages

The two fertiliser plants closed last week are run by the US firm CF Industries and produce around 60 per cent of Britain’s CO2.

They were shut when a spike in energy costs – caused by low supplies and storage levels of gas – caused its operating costs to rocket.

British Meat Processors Association boss Nick Allen told the Sun: ‘Everyone is outraged these fertiliser plants can shut down without warning and take something so essential to the supply chain off-stream just like that.’  

Four more small energy firms could go bust amid the UK’s rocketing energy prices

One million customers could be set for a new energy supplier as four small firms could go bust as early as next week amid skyrocketing energy prices.

The rising cost of supplying energy has left the four firms unable to power their customer’s homes.

The four suppliers have requested larger businesses to prepare for a takeover of their supply, reports the BBC.

Earlier this week,  People’s Energy, based in Edinburgh, and Utility Point from Dorset announced they had ceased trading.

More than 570,000 customers and 1,000 businesses will have been affected by the change.  

At the start of 2021, there were 70 suppliers providing energy to homes across the UK – although experts anticipate this number dropping to 10 by 2022. 

Industry group Oil & Gas UK warned wholesale prices for gas have risen 250 per cent since January – with a 70pc boom since August. 

Ranjit Singh Boparan, the owner of Bernard Matthews and 2 Sisters Food Group, warned the supply of Christmas turkeys was at risk, adding: ‘The CO2 issue is a massive body blow and puts us at breaking point.’ Ocado, the online grocer, told customers this weekend that it had a ‘limited stock’ of frozen items due to a national shortage of dry ice – solid CO2.

Shadow economic secretary to the Treasury Pat McFadden said: ‘This really must act as a spur to avoid situations like this where suddenly we’re very exposed when there’s an international price spike.’

He told Sky News’s Trevor Phillips on Sunday programme: ‘In the short term what the Business Secretary must do is ensure continuity of supply, that’s a basic duty of Government for both domestic consumers and for businesses.

‘We’ve seen other ramifications of this over the last 24/48 hours, for example on food supplies, with CO2 being a necessary by-product, and in the long-term what this has shown is the need to get on with the transition to net-zero and the vulnerability of the reliance on fossil fuel markets, especially international ones.

‘This should act as a spur to get on with the transition to net-zero, more renewable and sustainable supplies because the effect of all this will be rising prices for consumers just when they’re being hit with other things too.’

As well as the food and drink industries, CO2 from the plants is used by hospitals and the nuclear power industry.

 A by-product of the fertiliser production process is carbon dioxide (CO2), which is used in fizzy drinks and beer, as well as by the meat industry to stun animals before slaughter, in food packaging to extend shelf life and keep deliveries chilled. If supplies of CO2 run short, it raises the prospect of meat disappearing from supermarket shelves within weeks. 

Ocado, the online grocer, told customers this weekend that it had a ‘limited stock’ of frozen items due to a national shortage of dry ice – solid CO2.

Andrew Opie, of the British Retail Consortium, yesterday said: ‘This could not come at a worse time, with the shortfall of 90,000 HGV drivers already putting severe pressure on food production and distribution.’

Ahead of tomorrow’s summit, Mr Kwarteng spent yesterday calling energy firms individually.

Last night, in a bid to ease anxieties, he said: ‘I was reassured that security of supply was not a cause for immediate concern within the industry. The UK benefits from having a diverse range of gas supply sources, with sufficient capacity to more than meet demand.’

Mr Kwarteng and Greg Hands, the new Energy Minister, will tomorrow ask 20 of Britain’s biggest energy companies to help stop bills soaring over the winter. Firms invited to the 90-minute roundtable include National Grid, energy suppliers Centrica, Ovo and Bulb, and regulator Ofgem.  

One energy boss said Ministers could cut bills by around £150 per year if they axed the ‘green taxes’ on electricity, which make up around 23 per cent of their total.

Another industry source said the energy price cap could be reviewed more frequently, up from twice a year currently. The cap is announced two months in advance, potentially leaving smaller suppliers unable to cover the cost of energy they have committed to supply. Five small suppliers have gone bust since August.

A lack of CO2 means that those working in the meat industry are unable to stun their animals before slaughtering them – as well as increasing the shelf life of packaged foods (stock image)

 One energy boss said Ministers could cut bills by around £150 per year if they axed the ‘green taxes’ on electricity, which make up around 23 per cent of their total.

Another industry source said the energy price cap could be reviewed more frequently, up from twice a year currently. The cap is announced two months in advance, potentially leaving smaller suppliers unable to cover the cost of energy they have committed to supply. Five small suppliers have gone bust since August.

The spike in gas prices has been caused by factors including low reserves after last year’s cold winter, reduced supply from Russia, rising EU carbon prices, and low solar and wind energy output this month.

Last Friday, more than 40 MEPs accused Russian energy giant Gazprom of hiking gas prices to undermine Britain and the EU’s recovery from the pandemic. 

 But Mr Kwarteng said Britain is not dependent on Russian oil and gas, adding: ‘Our largest source of energy is from domestic production and the majority of imports come from reliable suppliers such as Norway. We do not expect supply emergencies this winter.’

A by-product of the fertiliser production process is carbon dioxide (CO2), which is used in fizzy drinks and beer, as well as by the meat industry to stun animals before slaughter, in food packaging to extend shelf life and keep deliveries chilled. If supplies of CO2 run short, it raises the prospect of meat disappearing from supermarket shelves within weeks. 

Ocado, the online grocer, told customers this weekend that it had a ‘limited stock’ of frozen items due to a national shortage of dry ice – solid CO2.

The two fertiliser plants closed last week are run by the US firm CF Industries and produce around 60 per cent of Britain’s CO2.

They were shut when a spike in energy costs – caused by low supplies and storage levels of gas – caused its operating costs to rocket. 

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