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Supply crisis hits Greggs vegan sausage rolls

Stores in London have been particularly badly affected

James Davey,Victor Jack
Wednesday 17 November 2021 19:31 GMT
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The vegan sausage roll was launched by Greggs in 2019
The vegan sausage roll was launched by Greggs in 2019 (Getty Images)

Greggs has warned its vegan sausage roll is the latest product to succumb to supply chain disruption.

The snack - light puff pastry with a seasoned Quorn filling - was launched by the high street baker in 2019 and quickly became a popular meat-free alternative to its classic sausage roll and steak and chicken bakes.

The shortage follows panic buying at Britain’s fuel pumps, soaring heating prices and limited supplies of crisps.

Greggs, based in Newcastle, said there were “temporary interruptions” to supplies of products including vegan sausage rolls across the United Kingdom.

“Some shops may not have them or may not have them throughout the day. It varies,” said a spokesperson for the chain, adding that the firm was working hard to minimise the disruption and did offer a broad range of alternative snacks.

Stores in the capital were particularly hard hit with Reuters reporters noting Greggs branches in Twickenham, Richmond and Earls Court out of vegan sausage rolls in the first half of this week, its new outlet in Canary Wharf out of the product on Tuesday and Wednesday and its South Woodford branch out of stock on Wednesday.

Greggs chief executive Roger Whiteside warned last month that the firm had not been immune to Britain’s well-documented pressures on staffing and supply chains due to the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic and Brexit, and had seen some disruption to the availability of labour and supply of ingredients and products.

The retail sector veteran told Reuters he wakes up every morning asking what new item had disappeared, but he pledged to not run out of sausage rolls.

Despite the supply chain disruption, Greggs has recovered well after its business model was hammered by the pandemic and its shares are up over 70 per cent this year.

Reuters

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