“We don’t see foodservice recovering over next year” – Bonduelle’s Grégory Sanson on French group’s FY results and outlook

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Away from the difficulties presented by Covid-19, Bonduelle, the international vegetable-products supplier, has also had to face adversity specific to the business in recent weeks.

In August, Jérôme Bonduelle, a member of the France-based group's management committee died in a road accident while riding his bike in the northern city of Lille.

"A huge loss for all of us, personally and for the company," Bonduelle deputy CEO Grégory Sanson says. "We are a family-owned company and, every time we lose one of our associates it does affect the entire company, especially in this case."

Mr Bonduelle was the cousin of group CEO Christophe Bonduelle and had worked for the business since 2002. Since last September, he had been general manager of what Bonduelle called "prospective and développement".

Sanson, who also joined Bonduelle in 2002, says the company has yet to decide whether to fill the vacant role. "He was managing the expert departments in terms of R&D, engineering and agronomy, which is critical for all the business units and he was also in charge of developing the business in new territories – geographical and in terms of technology and industry around plant-based food and opening new territories. That's also critical for our development. We will see how we either fill the position or reallocate the job to our existing management committee."

Speaking to just-food on Tuesday (29 September) after Bonduelle booked a rise in annual sales but a fall in profits, Sanson, one of three deputy CEOs at the company, describes the 12 months on which the group has just reported as "a challenging year". Revenues rose 2.8% to EUR2.85bn (US$3.34bn), up 1.4% on a like-for-like basis, but Bonduelle's "current operating income" was 12.1% lower at EUR108.7m and its net income down almost a quarter at EUR54.6m.

Sanson, who oversees finance and development at Bonduelle (alongside two other deputy CEOs who look after the company's operations in the Americas and in Europe, respectively), said the results under review – for the year to the end of June – felt only a "limited" impact from Covid-19 on its sales but saw "a significant impact in terms of profitability".

Bonduelle, like its peers across the packaged-food industry, ran up extra costs implementing social distancing in factories, buying protective equipment and paying staff bonuses to maintain production. "None of our employees have been affected within the production facilities by C19. They've been affected in their family environments and we are very cautious making sure that this will not spread within our facilities or offices. The impact has been limited, but that was a real challenge for us," Sanson says.