Buyer Guide

How Extreme Heat Affects Tomato Paste Supply: What Buyers Should Watch in 2026

Extreme heat can affect processing tomatoes, Brix, maturity timing, factory intake and shipment planning. For tomato paste buyers, the practical question is how to monitor specification stability and supply continuity during a hot season.

As of early June 2026, heat is already part of the sourcing conversation. Copernicus reported April 2026 as the joint third-warmest April globally, WMO's June-August seasonal outlook points to above-normal temperatures across many regions, and WPTC has reported heat pressure in several European processing tomato areas. This does not prove a shortage or a price move. It does mean buyers should monitor weather, crop progress, factory rhythm and export data together.

Extreme heat does not only affect fresh tomatoes. For processing tomatoes and tomato paste, heat can affect yield, maturity timing, soluble solids, factory delivery rhythm, specification stability and shipment planning.

For buyers of bulk tomato paste, the 2026 question is not only whether the market is hot or cool. It is whether a supplier can deliver stable Brix, color, viscosity, packaging and shipment timing during a season when weather, planting area, inventory and demand all need to be monitored.

Why Extreme Heat Matters for Tomato Paste Buyers

Processing tomato supply is concentrated. WPTC describes a global industry that processes around 40 million tonnes of tomatoes per year, with production strongly concentrated in the leading producing countries. Its dashboard also shows the United States, Italy and China as major processing countries in 2025, while China remains one of the key tomato paste exporters.

This concentration matters because weather in a few production regions can affect a large share of the crop calendar. In the Northern Hemisphere, most processing tomato activity takes place from July to December. Heat during planting, fruit set, ripening or harvest can influence the timing and quality of raw material entering factories.

Supply was already showing normal cycle movement before the 2026 summer season. WPTC's February 2026 world production estimate showed 2025 final processing volume at about 40.4 million tonnes, down from about 45.9 million tonnes in 2024. For China, WPTC's 30 March 2026 crop update estimated 5.92 million tonnes of processed tomatoes and stated that the downward revision was mainly linked to farmers' cautious market outlook and lower planting enthusiasm, rather than a simple weather conclusion.

For tomato paste buyers, this is the right way to read the market: heat is one of the key variables, but it should be monitored together with planting area, previous-season inventory, raw tomato prices, logistics, exchange rates, destination demand and contract timing.

How Heat Affects Processing Tomatoes

Extreme heat can influence processing tomatoes at several points before the paste is loaded for export.

First, heat can affect field development. If high temperatures arrive during sensitive growth stages, they may affect flowering, fruit set, fruit size or maturity uniformity. Where irrigation is available and well managed, some stress can be reduced. Where heat is combined with water stress, the crop can face higher pressure.

Second, heat can change maturity timing. A short period of high temperature may accelerate ripening in some fields, while longer heat or uneven water availability can create mixed maturity across fields. For factories, this matters because raw tomato deliveries may become more concentrated on certain days or less predictable across the harvest window.

Third, heat can affect harvest and transport rhythm. Processing tomato factories depend on a steady flow of raw material. When field deliveries are compressed, delayed or interrupted, factory utilization and processing schedules may need adjustment. UC Davis research on California processing tomatoes shows that efficient postharvest logistics can help reduce losses under high temperatures, which reinforces an important buyer point: the field is not the only place where heat risk is managed.

Finally, heat can affect shipment planning indirectly. Tomato paste is not exported at the exact moment heat occurs in the field. Raw tomatoes must be harvested, processed, packed, stored, booked and shipped. This is why buyers should watch the months after a heat period, not only the heat month itself.

Brix Is Not the Whole Story

Brix is important because tomato paste buyers often specify natural tomato soluble solids. Heat and water availability can influence soluble solids, but the relationship is not one-directional.

Moderate water stress during the right late-season window may increase fruit soluble solids. UC Davis guidance on deficit irrigation for processing tomatoes notes that deficit irrigation can increase fruit Brix, but also warns that increasing Brix through water stress comes with a yield tradeoff if not carefully managed. Other processing tomato research also shows that water supply can affect soluble solids, yield and quality.

That is why buyers should avoid reading Brix alone. A higher Brix number is not useful if color, viscosity, microbiological control, packaging integrity or shipment timing becomes unstable. In a hot season, buyers should confirm the complete specification and the supplier's ability to keep that specification consistent across production lots.

Weather Factors and Supply Chain Impact

Extreme heat can affect tomato paste supply through several field and factory channels. Buyers should treat these as monitoring points, not automatic outcomes.

Weather factor Field impact Factory impact Buyer risk
Extreme heat May affect flowering, fruit set, fruit size, maturity timing and plant stress. Can compress raw tomato deliveries or shift factory intake rhythm. Less predictable supply window; earlier specification and shipment confirmation may be needed.
Drought / water stress May raise soluble solids under moderate control, but can reduce yield or maturity uniformity under excess stress. Lower raw material volume or more variable quality may affect production planning. Brix may look favorable while volume, viscosity or continuity becomes less certain.
Heat during harvest Can speed ripening and increase pressure on harvesting schedules. Factories may receive larger daily volumes or face shorter processing windows. Shipment planning may need more flexibility; lot consistency should be checked.
Uneven maturity Mixed green, red or overripe fruit can appear across fields. Sorting and processing control become more important. Color, viscosity and finished paste consistency may vary between lots.
Sudden cooling or rain after heat Can slow field operations or create quality variation after stress. Factory intake may be interrupted or delayed. Contract timing, loading schedule and packaging plan should be reconfirmed.

Historical Review: Global Supply Stress, Heat Events and China Export Patterns

For tomato paste buyers, the useful question is not simply whether China had a hot year. The stronger historical signal is how China export weight and average export unit value behaved when global tomato paste supply was under pressure.

The 2022-2024 period should not be read as a China-only heat story. A more balanced interpretation is that global tomato paste supply entered a high-price cycle after weather and water-stress pressure in other major producing origins, especially California and parts of Europe/Mediterranean markets in 2022. The price cycle then continued through contract pricing, inventory, raw tomato costs, destination demand and the timing of global production recovery.

Based on customs data reviewed by RTM, China bulk tomato paste export weight rose from 511,388 tons in 2021 to 728,147 tons in 2023, while average export unit value rose from US$783/ton to US$1,185/ton. By 2025, export weight stayed near 2024 levels, but average export unit value fell to US$675/ton. This pattern suggests that the 2022-2024 movement was partly weather-driven, but not only weather-driven.

China Bulk Tomato Paste Export Weight and Average Export Unit Value, 2021-2025

Left axis: annual export weight. Right axis: average export unit value. The light red band marks the global supply-stress / high-price cycle rather than a China-only heat period. 2026 is not shown in the line chart because only partial-year data is currently available.

Partly weather-driven global supply-stress / high-price cycle 760k t 620k t 480k t 1,250 925 600 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 511k t 664k t 728k t 669k t 670k t $783/t $945/t $1,185/t $1,001/t $675/t Export weight Avg export unit value Supply-stress cycle

How to Read the Export Signal

Annual data can show market direction, but it cannot prove that heat alone caused a specific export result. The more useful buyer reading is to connect weather events in major origins with supply, inventory, contract pricing and China export data.

Period Market context China export weight Weight change Avg export unit value Unit value change Buyer reading
2021 Baseline year in this five-year review. 511,388 tons - US$783/ton - Useful starting point before the global high-price cycle.
2022 External-origin weather and water-stress pressure helped tighten global supply. 663,863 tons +29.8% US$945/ton +20.6% China exports benefited from a tighter global supply environment, but heat was not the only driver.
2023 High-price cycle continued; crop contracts and raw tomato prices stayed elevated. 728,147 tons +9.7% US$1,185/ton +25.4% The strongest unit value in this period looks more like a global high-price cycle than a China-only weather story.
2024 Price normalization started, but unit value stayed above 2021-2022 levels. 669,007 tons -8.1% US$1,001/ton -15.5% Weight and unit value both eased from 2023, showing that the high-price cycle was already softening.
2025 Post-cycle market reset. 669,668 tons +0.1% US$675/ton -32.6% Weight stayed near 2024 while unit value fell sharply, suggesting inventory, demand and price-cycle factors were important.
Jan-Apr 2026 Weather-risk watch year, not yet a confirmed repeat of 2022-2024. 220,095 tons Partial-year data; not comparable with full-year volume. US$666/ton Still near the 2025 low-price range in this customs-data view. Current weather raises monitoring needs, but export unit value has not yet shown a 2023-style high-price signal.

2026 Weather-Risk Watch

As of early June 2026, current weather conditions do not yet prove a repeat of the 2022-2024 high-price cycle. However, early heat in Europe, above-normal seasonal temperature outlooks, lower California contract intentions and a smaller global production cushion mean buyers should monitor 2026 as a weather-risk season. The key period to watch is June-August: if heat persists into flowering, fruit set or harvest in major origins, and if WPTC updates begin to reduce production expectations, the weather signal would become more important for tomato paste sourcing.

Price Interpretation Note

If average export unit value is used in RTM's customs data review, it should be treated as a market trend indicator only. It is calculated from China Customs export value divided by export volume. It does not represent RTM Tomato's quotation, nor the transaction price of any specific supplier, product, contract or shipment. Actual tomato paste prices may vary by Brix level, color value, processing type, packaging format, destination market, shipment timing, contract terms and product specification.

What This Means for Global Tomato Paste Supply

Extreme heat changes tomato paste sourcing from a simple price comparison into a broader supply check.

For global buyers, the main concern is not only whether a crop is larger or smaller. It is whether the supplier can keep production lots stable, manage factory intake, pack the required format and meet shipment timing. A buyer sourcing aseptic drum tomato paste, canned tomato paste or other tomato ingredients should check both product specification and seasonal execution capacity.

The global context also supports origin awareness. WPTC's trade overview shows tomato paste as a major traded tomato product, with a limited group of exporting countries accounting for most international volume. Buyers that rely on one origin or one shipment window may face more exposure when weather, logistics or demand changes at the same time.

For longer-term context, buyers can compare this article with RTM's China tomato paste export data review, Xinjiang's role in China tomato paste exports and China tomato paste export destinations.

Buyer Checklist for Hot Seasons

  1. Check origin and crop season. Confirm whether the product comes from the current crop, previous crop or mixed inventory.
  2. Confirm Brix and specification. Do not stop at Brix; confirm color value, viscosity, pH, acidity, mold count and product type where relevant.
  3. Ask about color and viscosity. Heat, maturity and processing control can affect more than soluble solids.
  4. Watch shipment timing. Ask whether the supplier can meet the loading window if factory intake or packaging schedules shift.
  5. Compare monthly export signals. Use tomato paste export data to monitor volume, average export unit value and destination-market changes after major weather or water-stress periods in key origins.
  6. Avoid relying only on the lowest price. A low price is not enough if shipment reliability or specification consistency is weak.
  7. Plan earlier during hot seasons. Earlier planning gives more room to confirm production lots, packaging, documentation and vessel schedules.

How RTM Helps Buyers Plan Tomato Paste Sourcing

RTM helps global buyers evaluate China tomato paste sourcing with a practical focus on specification, packaging and export timing. As a China tomato paste supplier, RTM can help buyers discuss bulk tomato paste requirements, Brix levels, aseptic drum packaging, canned tomato paste options and shipment planning before the procurement window becomes tight.

During a hot season, the value of supplier communication increases. Buyers should ask for clear product specifications, realistic loading schedules and a sourcing plan that considers crop timing. For product discussions, buyers can review RTM's bulk tomato paste and aseptic drum tomato paste options or contact RTM for bulk tomato paste sourcing.

FAQ

Does extreme heat always reduce tomato paste supply?

No. Extreme heat may affect processing tomatoes, factory rhythm and shipment planning, but it does not automatically reduce tomato paste supply. Buyers should monitor heat together with planting area, irrigation, inventory, demand, logistics and export data.

Can hot weather increase Brix in tomato paste raw material?

Moderate water stress can increase soluble solids in processing tomatoes under controlled conditions, but excess heat or water stress may reduce yield, maturity uniformity or quality. Buyers should check Brix together with color, viscosity and shipment reliability.

What should tomato paste buyers watch in 2026?

Buyers should watch crop updates from major origins, confirmed heat or water-stress periods, Brix and full specification stability, factory delivery rhythm, packaging availability, shipment timing and China tomato paste export data after major weather events.

Public Sources Used

Data source note: Where export data is discussed, the recommended wording is "RTM's review of China Customs data for bulk tomato paste in containers weighing more than 5kg." Average export unit value should be used for trend analysis only and should not be presented as a supplier quotation.

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