🇱🇻🇱🇹🇪🇪Who is really shaping the Baltic egg market? (corrected)
Latvia is strengthening its position as the Baltic region’s main egg hub.
A €30 million investment by Agrova Baltics is not just a company expansion story. It is part of a broader shift across the Baltic egg market, where scale, capital and compliance with retail standards are becoming decisive. Agrova plans to complete its transition to 100% cage-free production by 2028. The programme in Alūksne includes 3 new poultry houses, upgrades to sorting and packing, expansion of feed production, development of organic fertiliser output and wider infrastructure modernisation.
Latvia
Balticovo: 700+ million eggs/year
Agrova Baltics: 146 million eggs sold in 2025
National egg production: ~800-850 million eggs/year
Market structure: two large-scale producers dominate the sector
This is what gives Latvia a strong regional position: scale, concentration and export capacity are combined in one market.
Agrova Baltics
Beneficial owner: Jurijs Adamovičs
Control via: J.A. Investment Holdings
Private equity partner: Accession Capital Partners
Financing model: capital markets + debt financing
Structure: vertically integrated platform
(egg production, feed, energy, trading)
Balticovo
Largest shareholder: SIA BCO
Tatjana Poplavska: 60.3% of BCO
Valdis Grimze: 29.7%
Vladimirs Mhitarjans: 10.0%
Structure: private, concentrated local ownership
Model: industrial operator with long-term internal control
What Agrova’s €30 million will fund
3 new poultry houses
modernisation of egg sorting and packing facilities
expansion of feed production
development of organic fertiliser production
upgrades to supporting infrastructure
Result: higher capacity, stronger biosecurity and a more integrated production base.
Lithuania
741.64 million industrial eggs in 2025
+3.6% year on year
egg output from caged hens: -20.28%
barn production: +56.28%
domestic sales of Class A eggs: -23.88%
The Lithuanian market is more fragmented and under heavier transition pressure.
production spread across several producers, including Girelės paukštynas and LIT EGG / Kaušėnų
more fragmented industry structure than Latvia
ongoing transition from cage systems to barn and cage-free production
Market dynamics: Domestic sales of Class A eggs in Lithuania fell by 23.88% in 2025. The Lithuanian Agricultural Data Centre linked the decline to the salmonellosis outbreak at the country’s largest egg sorting and packing facility.
Lithuania’s poultry association says the sector needs more than €60 million to complete the shift away from cage systems.
Estonia
largest producer: Dava Foods Estonia
part of the DAVA Foods / Danish Agro structure
189.5 million eggs produced in 2024
356.1 million eggs consumed
53% self-sufficiency
roughly every second egg consumed is imported
Estonia is not just a deficit market. Its largest producer is part of a Danish agro-food group, which means Baltic egg competition is no longer purely national.
What is changing across the region
Egg producers in the Baltics are no longer competing on cost alone. They are competing on:
retail compliance
production scale
access to capital
traceability and biosecurity
Bottom line
The Baltic egg market is no longer just a story of three neighbouring countries.
It is now a competitive mix of:
two large Latvian producers
a fragmented Lithuanian sector under costly transition pressure
an Estonian market where the leading producer is embedded in a Nordic agro-food structure
That is why Agrova’s investment matters beyond one company. It strengthens Latvia’s role as the Baltic region’s main egg hub.
BDW © 2026 | balticfocus.org/
Image: photos/photo_222@19-03-2026_21-30-00.jpg