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Too hot to handle: South Korean kimchi under pressure as heatwave drives up cabbage prices

Rising summer temperatures are destabilising supply of cabbage, a key ingredient of kimchi that many Koreans eat every day

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Buddhist monks and Buddhists make kimchi at Jogye temple in Seoul. Photo: AP
An unprecedented heatwave across South Korea has driven up the price of cabbages, data revealed on Friday, with the vegetable used in the famed national dish kimchi surging by nearly 70 per cent year-on-year.
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The price of a single cabbage hit 9,337 won (US$7.02) on Thursday – up by 69.1 per cent from the same day a year ago, according to data released by the state-run Korea Agro-Fisheries & Food Trade Corporation.

Cabbage is a key ingredient of kimchi, the country’s famed fiery fermented dish which many Koreans eat every day.

Cabbage is a key ingredient of kimchi, the country’s famed fiery fermented dish which many Koreans eat every day. Photo: AFP
Cabbage is a key ingredient of kimchi, the country’s famed fiery fermented dish which many Koreans eat every day. Photo: AFP

Experts say rising summer temperatures are leading to supply instability – especially for highland cabbage, which thrives in cooler climates.

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“Additionally, climate change has changed the patterns of soil disease outbreaks,” said Lee Young-gyu, a virologist at the National Institute of Crop Science.

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