Horai, a traditional Bernese organic wholesaler, has filed for bankruptcy, citing pressures from a drop in sales at specialty shops, increased competition from discounters, and lower consumer purchasing power. The closure reflects broader challenges within Switzerland's organic market.

"One of the reasons for the bankruptcy is a drop in sales at the organic speciality shops and restaurants supplied."
"Ultimately, the company was no longer able to cover its fixed costs."
A pillar of the Bernese organic movement has crumbled. Horai, the traditional wholesaler that defined the region's ecological trade for over four decades, has officially filed for bankruptcy. The closure in Fraubrunnen marks a devastating end to a 42-year legacy, sending shockwaves through the local agricultural community. Founded in 1984, long before 'organic' became a marketing buzzword for mass retailers, Horai stood as a testament to sustainable commerce. Today, that testament is silent.
The human cost is immediate and painful. All 18 employees are set to lose their jobs as the company ceases operations. While salaries are reportedly guaranteed until the end of April, the psychological blow to the workforceâand the community that built this cooperative ownership modelâis immeasurable. Chairman of the Board Kaspar Ramseier confirmed the collapse, signaling that even the most established players are not immune to the brutal economic headwinds currently battering Switzerland's retail sector.
The numbers do not lie: consumer loyalty is evaporating in the face of economic pressure. Horai's downfall is directly attributed to a sharp, relentless drop in sales across the specialty shops and restaurants it supplied. The culprit? A brutal combination of aggressive competition from major discounters and a shrinking consumer wallet. As inflation bites, Swiss shoppers are increasingly abandoning premium specialty stores for cheaper organic alternatives found on supermarket shelves.
This is a war of margins, and Horai has lost. The company explicitly cited an inability to cover fixed costs as order volumes plummeted. While the demand for organic products remains, the willingness to pay for the high-overhead, ethically distributed version has collapsed. The market is flooding with lower-priced organic goods, forcing pioneers who refuse to compromise on price or quality into insolvency. It is a stark reminder that in the current economic climate, price sensitivity is overriding ecological heritage.
The collapse of Horai is not an isolated event; it is a systemic failure that impacts a network of nearly 150 businesses. From niche organic boutiques to farm-to-table restaurants, the supply chain has been severed. These businesses, which relied on Horai's curated selection of producers, must now scramble to find alternative logistics partners in an already strained market. The ripple effects will likely force smaller retailers to either raise prices further or compromise on their sourcing standards.
Horai was unique in its structureâowned by producers, suppliers, customers, and employeesâcreating a tight-knit ecosystem that is now unraveling. This interdependence, once its greatest strength, has become a vulnerability. As the wholesaler falls, it drags down the collective bargaining power of the small-scale producers who relied on Horai to get their goods to market without bowing to the massive volume demands of national supermarket chains.
Horai's bankruptcy signals a critical turning point for Swiss agriculture: the era of uncompromising idealism is colliding with cold market logistics. The company famously adhered to a strict 100-kilometer delivery limit to minimize its carbon footprint. While ecologically noble, this self-imposed restriction likely strangled its ability to scale or adapt in a market where competitors prioritize efficiency and reach over carbon counting.
This failure raises an uncomfortable question for the industry: Can strict ecological dogmas survive in a discount-driven economy? The closure suggests that