Looking to the 2026 Pollination Season and Beyond

Thursday, 23 April 2026

The 2026 pollination season is fast approaching. Across the Maritime region, beekeepers are starting to prepare for the movement of thousands of honey bee colonies to wild blueberry fields. This week’s blog post will highlight some of the expectations of the 2026 pollination season and provide key future considerations for beekeepers and wild blueberry growers.

Looking to the 2026 Pollination Season and Beyond

Over the past month or more, beekeepers have been working hard to care for colonies. When weather has permitted, beekeepers have been assessing winter loss, checking food stores, feeding if necessary, and are now starting the process of balancing colonies for the coming pollination season.    Winter losses and spring management will determine the number of colonies available for pollination.  The hope is that the region’s pollination capacity this spring has increased in comparison to last.  Under ideal conditions, around 35,000 Maritime colonies will be sent to wild blueberry pollination for the 2026 season.  Breaking this optimistic goal down by province, Nova Scotia may approach 20,000 colonies for pollination this spring.  New Brunswick is well placed to have 10,000 colonies available, and PEI could approach 5,000 colonies.  These speculative numbers will depend on winter losses and will only be determined after blueberry bloom.

Honey bee pollinating wild blueberry flower (ATTTA©2022).

The demand for wild blueberry pollination remains high across the Maritime region. Last year, New Brunswick imported over 30,000 honey bee colonies to provide pollination services, Prince Edward Island imported nearly 3,500 colonies, and Nova Scotia imported 864 colonies. It is expected that each Maritime province will import an equal, or increased, number of colonies to help meet the pollination demand in 2026. Nova Scotia may extend the Pollination Pilot Project, introduced in 2025, with possibly an expanded number of pollinating colonies permitted to enter the province in 2026. The other two Maritime provinces may have an increase in demand for imported colonies as is often seen when there is confidence in a robust market price for blueberries. This strong demand for pollination units sees blueberry producers increasingly looking outside the region to meet their need for pollination units.  As blueberry producers lean more on imported colonies, as well as non-apis pollinators, the market share held by Maritime beekeepers is worth exploring.

According to a leading business magazine, the Harvard Business Review, in any business, market share is the main determinant for profitability due to economies of scale, market power, and the quality of management.  Market share is simply defined as:

Often the individual sales may be a single company selling a specific product into a larger market, but this can also apply to a market sector.  A relatable example is the report by Stats Canada that, in 2024, lowbush blueberry production was 94,111 metric tons against an overall fruit production for the country of 930,982 metric tons.  This indicates that the lowbush blueberry sector represented a 10.1% market share of overall fruit production in Canada. This sort of model can be applied to other aspects of wild blueberry production and commercial beekeeping.

When looking at pollination for wild blueberries, the market share held by beekeepers has changed over the years.  An interesting example can be found when looking at some statistics from the New Brunswick wild blueberry industry generally and the current Wild Blueberry Pollination Strategy specifically.  As reported in the executive summary of the strategy1,  on average for the period from 2018 – 2023, New Brunswick beekeepers supplied 9,500 colonies out of the total 32,500 used for wild blueberry pollination (29.23% market share).  The projections in the strategy estimate that by 2029, New Brunswick beekeepers will supply 17,000 of the 57,000 honey bee colonies required for wild blueberry pollination.  This would maintain market share at roughly 29.82%.  Currently, when reviewing the estimates of the 2025 season, New Brunswick colonies only made up 9,958 of the 40,300 bee hives used overall.  This is a 24.72% market share. This indicates that New Brunswick beekeepers have lost overall market share and are not matching the trajectory expected to maintain the estimated market share proposed in the pollination strategy.

The circumstances in Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island differ somewhat from those discussed above.  The planned increase in blueberry production acreage for NB, with more need for pollination services, is not matched by the other two Maritime provinces.  Nonetheless, there is pressure across the industry for production efficiencies, gained in part, through increased yields for existing acreage.  To achieve this increase in yield, more pollination units will be required.  The resulting increased demand for pollination services in Nova Scotia is evidenced by the importation of 864 colonies into the province in 2025 through the Pollination Pilot Project.  The number of colonies imported into NS is likely to only increase for 2026 and into the future.  Even with NS having record breaking hive numbers in the fall of 2025 (approximately 30,000) the importation will decrease the market share of for the provinces beekeepers by an estimated 5 – 7% for this season compared to prior years.  Prince Edward Island has seen a slight downward trend in the number of hives managed in the province for the past several years.  So, if demand remains constant on the Island, market share for the province’s beekeepers will be lost equivalent to the decrease in provincial hive numbers.  

When discussing the pollination market share, it is important to recognize that non-apis pollinators, such as bumble bees and alfalfa leaf cutter bees, are a growing portion of the market. Each year an increasing number of bumble bee quads are being imported into the Maritime region, and, although the specific number of imported quads is not recorded, it is recognized that bumble bees and other managed non-apis pollinators are gaining market share of the pollination industry.  The strong market share of non-apis pollinators can be seen in New Brunswick with the province projecting that by 2029, bumble bees and alfalfa leaf cutter bees will make up 24% of the total pollination capacity.

Globally, the demand for wild blueberries, and, therefore, pollination services, remains high. More acres going into production and increasing production efficiencies will also push demand for pollination of wild blueberries.  Market share is only one consideration, especially as there is still a strong, growing need for honey bee colonies in the region.  With this, comes opportunities for beekeepers and sector growth.  Loss of market share may be inevitable as, in some areas, factors like forage availability, limit growth capacity of commercial beekeepers.  This will mean that the demand cannot be met from within the Maritime region.  Alternatively, the advantages of market share, such as economy of scale and the associated demonstration of the quality of management, should not be ignored.  The other important aspect of market share is market power.  Currently the strong relationship between the Maritime beekeeping and wild blueberry industries is due to local honey bees being a foundational pollination provider.  As the share of the market alters due to importation of honey bee colonies, and with the expanded use of non-apis pollinators, market power may shift.  It is yet to be seen how the 2026 pollination season will unfold but the hope is that local honey bees will perform, as always, to support a successful wild blueberry production season.


1.  1. New Brunswick Wild Blueberry Pollination Strategy (Executive Summary) (2024) https://www2.gnb.ca/content/dam/gnb/Departments/10/pdf/Agriculture/WildBlueberries-BleuetsSauvages/nb-wild-blueberry-pollination-strategy.pdf


Connecting with ATTTA Specialists

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visit our website at https://www.perennia.ca/portfolio-items/honey-bees/

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