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Mexico: Local Forecast

Need-to-know info on Mexico’s top growing regions
Mexico Map_MS

Like many partners with a long history, Mexico, the United States, and Canada enjoy a relationship that’s often fraught with highs and lows. Given the current political climate, this isn’t likely to change anytime soon. One thing is indisputable: the three countries are essential trading partners, especially when it comes to agriculture.

It’s no surprise Mexico dominated U.S. agricultural imports in 2016, at nearly 20 percent, surpassing Canada as the U.S.’s top ag supplier.

Nearly 60 percent of Mexico’s ag exports go to the United States, with fresh produce accounting for $10.5 billion of this total in 2016. This steady pipeline of exports has propelled Mexico to a new ranking as the 12th-largest food producer in the world.

Here’s a look at Mexico’s vast and varied growing regions and how producers are rising to the challenge of supplying North America’s ever-increasing appetite for fresh fruits and vegetables on a year-round basis.

A History of Cultivation
Agriculture has played a key role in Mexico’s history for thousands of years. Mesoamerican civilizations, including the Olmecs, Mayas, and Aztecs, relied on agriculture as a foundation of their societies. Among their staple crops were the “three sisters”—winter squash, beans, and corn—which are still cultivated in abundance today.

But curious palates and a booming population at home and abroad have pushed other crops ahead of the traditional sisters: chile peppers, bell peppers, cucumbers, tomatoes, citrus, berries, avocados, and a wide range of tropical fruits have exploded in popularity in recent years.

In response, Mexican growers across the country—along with their Canadian and U.S. partners—have considerably stepped up production to meet demand.

Many Regions, More Produce
Mexico encompasses about 742,000 square miles, and more than half of this land is used for agricultural production, which includes ranching as well as farming operations.

Generally speaking, the country can be divided into six principal growing regions—the Baja Peninsula, the Gulf of Mexico and South, El Bajío and central Mexico, northern Mexico, the Pacific Coast, and the Yucatán Peninsula—each of which features a different climate and geography.

Top producers
While many of the country’s farming regions produce an abundance of crops, a few top the competition.

Among them are Baja California and Baja Sur in the Baja Peninsula, which is known for its berry and tomato production; the Pacific Coast, home to the ‘breadbasket’ states of Sonora and to its south Sinaloa; and El Bajío, in the lowlands of central Mexico.

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Like many partners with a long history, Mexico, the United States, and Canada enjoy a relationship that’s often fraught with highs and lows. Given the current political climate, this isn’t likely to change anytime soon. One thing is indisputable: the three countries are essential trading partners, especially when it comes to agriculture.

It’s no surprise Mexico dominated U.S. agricultural imports in 2016, at nearly 20 percent, surpassing Canada as the U.S.’s top ag supplier.

Nearly 60 percent of Mexico’s ag exports go to the United States, with fresh produce accounting for $10.5 billion of this total in 2016. This steady pipeline of exports has propelled Mexico to a new ranking as the 12th-largest food producer in the world.

Here’s a look at Mexico’s vast and varied growing regions and how producers are rising to the challenge of supplying North America’s ever-increasing appetite for fresh fruits and vegetables on a year-round basis.

A History of Cultivation
Agriculture has played a key role in Mexico’s history for thousands of years. Mesoamerican civilizations, including the Olmecs, Mayas, and Aztecs, relied on agriculture as a foundation of their societies. Among their staple crops were the “three sisters”—winter squash, beans, and corn—which are still cultivated in abundance today.

But curious palates and a booming population at home and abroad have pushed other crops ahead of the traditional sisters: chile peppers, bell peppers, cucumbers, tomatoes, citrus, berries, avocados, and a wide range of tropical fruits have exploded in popularity in recent years.

In response, Mexican growers across the country—along with their Canadian and U.S. partners—have considerably stepped up production to meet demand.

Many Regions, More Produce
Mexico encompasses about 742,000 square miles, and more than half of this land is used for agricultural production, which includes ranching as well as farming operations.

Generally speaking, the country can be divided into six principal growing regions—the Baja Peninsula, the Gulf of Mexico and South, El Bajío and central Mexico, northern Mexico, the Pacific Coast, and the Yucatán Peninsula—each of which features a different climate and geography.

Top producers
While many of the country’s farming regions produce an abundance of crops, a few top the competition.

Among them are Baja California and Baja Sur in the Baja Peninsula, which is known for its berry and tomato production; the Pacific Coast, home to the ‘breadbasket’ states of Sonora and to its south Sinaloa; and El Bajío, in the lowlands of central Mexico.

Geography and climate
When it comes to climate and geography, every growing region boasts something different. Such variations guarantee year-round cultivation and a steady supply of exportable crops from somewhere in Mexico (for a more in-depth look at climates and microclimates, see our sidebar on the next page).

The Baja Peninsula, for example, is sunny, arid, and occasionally rain-starved with an ideal climate and terrain for certain crops like grapes, berries, and peppers.

Then there’s the Yucatán Peninsula, with the states of Yucatán, Campeche, and Quintana Roo. With thinner soil and semitropical weather, these states are better suited to growing squash, beans, and various root vegetables. This particular region is far better known for its resorts and beaches than fruit and vegetable production.

Growers in the northern and northwestern states of Chihuahua, Coahuila, Sonora, and Sinaloa all employ irrigation systems, as the area is dry despite regular rain during the winter.

Along the Pacific coast are the states of Nayarit, Michoacán, Guerrero, and part of Jalisco, which count many popular tourist destinations like Puerto Vallarta and Acapulco among their better known cities.

South and Central
Further south, the states of Oaxaca and Chiapas, both home to large indigenous populations, range from semi-arid plateau and rainforest to mountainous highlands (at press time, this region had experienced a deadly earthquake near Chiapas and Oaxaca, the worse to hit the country in nearly a century).

Located on the Gulf of Mexico are the produce-growing states of Veracruz and Tamaulipas, and in the central part of the country is El Bajío, which includes the states of Querétaro, Guanajuato, Aguascalientes, and parts of Jalisco.

The Mother of All Markets
Nowhere is the proliferation of produce more evident than at La Central de Abasto wholesale center in Mexico City, the country’s capital most populous metropolitan area.

La Central de Abasto opened on the east side of the capital city in 1982 to help ease the overflowing consumer and business traffic at downtown’s Merced Market, the city’s main market.

Since then, La Central has grown to become one of the largest food markets in the world. More than 30,000 tons of food—about 30 percent of all the food consumed around Mexico—passes through the market every day.

Spread out over 778 acres, La Central is home to more than 2,000 small and large businesses, many of which still operate on a cash-only basis.

The market is so sprawling and busy that it has its own police force and postal code, as well as numerous restaurants, gas stations, bank branches, government offices, and even its own soccer league.

According to some of the 300,000 daily visitors, it can take up to 15 minutes to cross the entire market in a taxi.

A Kaleidoscope of Climates

Mexico has seven distinct climate regions which can be divided into three groups: tropical, dry, and temperate, and each of these has its own microclimates.

Tropical regions have two micro-climates: tropical wet and tropical wet-and-dry. The former is found along the Gulf Coast in the states of Veracruz and Tabasco, as well as in Oaxaca and the highlands of Chiapas.

Tropical wet-and-dry differs in that it features an actual dry season; this category covers most of the country’s Pacific coastal area and the Yucatán Peninsula.

The two dry climates are arid, a desert climate that can experience freezing winters; and semi-arid, which receives more rain, mostly during the summer months.

Mexico’s arid regions include most of Baja California, parts of Sonora, and the northern reaches of the Central Plateau (Coahuila and Chihuahua).

A semi-arid climate covers the southern section of the Central Plateau, northern Yucatán, and interior regions as far south as Oaxaca.

Like Baby Bear’s porridge, the temperate climate is just right: not too hot, not too cold.

What differentiates the three different microclimates in this group is the amount of rainfall. Temperate with dry winters means low humidity and mild temperatures, much like the weather in many of Mexico’s mountainous areas and in Nuevo León, and the interior of Tamaulipas, which also has tropical weather in its coastal areas.

Less prevalent are the humid subtropical and Mediterranean climates. The former features more rainfall throughout the year and exists only in the eastern Sierra Madre and in a limited area in the southern mountain region.

A Mediterranean climate, similar to the California coast, and is unique to the area around Tijuana, which is dry during the summer months and gets all of its rain in winter.

A Cornucopia of Crops
Fresh produce is one of the mainstays of La Central and a key business for growers and companies on both sides of the border.

And while some observers wonder whether the growth in volume of Mexican produce means that new regions are coming into play, others like Art Salinas, sales manager at Pharr, Texas-based Bonanza 2001, believe current growers are simply expanding their reach.

“There aren’t really new regions,” explains Salinas, whose company grows avocados and hydroponic greenhouse tomatoes in Jalisco.

“They’ve always been there,” continues Salinas, “but now they’ve increased their acreage. Where someone had one hectare, now they have two and maybe another greenhouse.”

Mike Righetti, managing member of Nogales, AZ-based Righetti Farms, LLC, has been in the produce business since 1992 importing melons, tomatoes, and foodservice mixers from the states of Sinaloa, Sonora, Jalisco, Michoacán and Guerrero.

As Righetti sees it, there are new regions entering the growing arena specifically to bridge the period from mid-May through September. And he credits protected agriculture for this trend.

“With the expansion of greenhouse growing, we’re seeing people expand into places like Zacatecas and San Luis Potosí,” Righetti notes. “New companies and startups are getting involved, and product is crossing primarily into Texas.”

Exports: Going, Going, Gone
Among the top exports are tomatoes, chile peppers, citrus, tropical fruits, and of course, avocados.

The latter have enjoyed a tremendous spike in popularity over the past several years, and Mexico is home to the world’s top supplier—the state of Michoacán—which also produces limes, strawberries, blackberries, cantaloupe, peaches, and bell peppers.

To put this into numbers, in 2016 Americans bought and consumed 2.2 billion pounds of avocados, 60 percent of which came from Mexico (around 24 million pounds were from domestic growers in California).

In recent years, Michoacán has become the biggest strawberry-growing region in Mexico as well, ranking higher than Baja California and Jalisco.

But the Baja Peninsula continues to be a major player, producing 83,721 tons of strawberries and blackberries in 2016, largely in open-air fields.

Even so, California still supplies the most significant volume of strawberries—nearly 80 percent—consumed in the United States, with Florida coming in second.

Citrus, Tropical, and Other Fruits
Like its northerly neighbor, Mexico is not immune to the scourge of the citrus industry: citrus greening or Huanglong-bing disease.

In Veracruz, home to most of the country’s orange groves, production was down in 2016 even though total orange production was nearly 5 million tons. While the disease still has not caused the type of destruction found in Florida’s citrus groves, growers are tracking the disease carefully.

Limes come of age
A citrus bright spot is limes, which have enjoyed climbing demand in the United States. America’s loss—a devastating plague of citrus canker back in 2007 which decimated the industry—has been a boon for Mexico’s growers and exporters.

Mexico is not only the top producer of limes (and lemons) in the world but the largest supplier to the United States. Mexico’s limes are grown mostly in Michoacán, Colima, Veracruz, and Oaxaca.

Other favorites
Tropical fruits, including mangos and papaya, are also hot commodities in both domestic and foreign markets, and grow in abundance in southern states like Chiapas and Oaxaca, as well as in Veracruz and Sonora.

Melons, too, flourish in Mexico’s various growing regions. Watermelon, cantaloupe, and honeydew grow principally in Guerrero, Jalisco, Colima, and Sinaloa.

The Temperate Zone
Occupying the temperate middle of the country is El Bajío, an area that sits at 5,000 to 5,900 feet above sea level. Thanks to its climate and established infrastructure, El Bajío, which means “lowlands,” is quickly expanding to become one of Mexico’s most critical growing regions.

“A big advantage of this specific region is that the weather is usually perfect for the products and the quality is high,” comments Edgar Gaona, whose father founded Chihuahua-based produce import/ export firm Frugasa S.A. de C.V.

“El Bajío, in particular, has the advantage that you can grow product almost every day of the year,” Gaona says.

Mark Vestal, president of Santa Barbara, California-based Western Pacific Produce, Inc., grows vegetables including broccoli, snow peas, carrots, and Napa cabbage in both Guanajuato and Puebla. “Because of the altitude, it’s cool and we have good growing conditions,” he explains.

Labor may be cheaper, but less mechanization means more labor. Good farmland is about the same price, and fuel costs the same, too.

Weather can be an advantage, but for some U.S. suppliers growing crops in Mexico, it’s about simplification. “It does not cost me less to do business down in Mexico,” admits Vestal, but he says it is less complicated than navigating California’s many regulations.

Protected Agriculture
As of late 2016, there were about 22,000 acres of protected agriculture in Mexico, consisting of greenhouses and various ‘protected’ structures like high tunnels or shade houses. Most of these structures can be found in the coastal states of Sinaloa, Jalisco, and Baja California.

According to the Mexican Association for Protected Horticulture, the country’s protected agriculture has been growing at an annual average rate of 3,600 acres for the past few years.

Tomatoes, cucumbers, and chiles account for the bulk of crops grown under protection, although lettuce, herbs, and bell peppers aren’t far behind.

Methods and technology
Frugasa’s Gaona says he’s seen a sizable increase in high tunnels, greenhouses, and shade cloth.

Bonanza 2001’s Salinas concurs, noting that while the protection doesn’t guarantee an issue-free crop, it offers peace of mind that most field cultivation can’t.

“We do worry about hurricanes, but our main concern is quality control and markets,” Salinas shares. “The technology is better now, and the greenhouses are more affordable, so more people are willing to invest.”

Righetti agrees, noting that he sources field- and greenhouse-grown product, and the trend is booming across Mexico despite the often substantial upfront capital investment.

Conditions and yields
Not only does greenhouse growing offer protection from cooler temperatures and inclement weather, it also allows growers to improve conditions in areas with marginal soil types.

“The ability to grow in better conditions means better yields,” Righetti opines. “If you’re buying product down in Mexico, a big percentage of it will be greenhouse; there’s no way around it.”

But it’s not just Mexico that’s seeing a proliferation of protected agriculture. The number of greenhouses going up in the United States, and Canada—North America’s greenhouse titan—has also been increasing, as field growers in these countries segue to greenhouses and the like.

Though it certainly ups the competition, there’s little doubt consumers will come out as the winners with nearly perfect produce, time after time, with less interference from Mother Nature.

The Future is Now
Although major growing regions are well established and expansion tends to be in protected agriculture rather than the open field, Mexico remains a land of opportunity for buyers and sellers alike.

Partnering for profit
With its varying terrain and a temperate climate, Mexico offers U.S. and Canadian grower-shippers and distributors plenty of options for year-round access to a broad range of fresh fruit and vegetables.

That said, weather can still be an issue for many growers, even in Mexico—as evidenced by the recent spate of hurricanes and tropical storms in late summer and early fall.

One of Righetti Farms’ specialties, for example, is melons, which prefer warm and dry growing conditions—but not too hot.

In 2016 the stars aligned for ideal weather and an excellent crop; unfortunately, that also meant there was too much product, more than the market could support.

This can also happen with climate variations that either shorten or lengthen the season, creating overlaps and competion with U.S. or other growing regions.

“Historically, we’ve had fixed start and stop dates,” Righetti explains. “The challenge with global warming is that areas are getting ready sooner. Now things are off by two weeks, behind or early, and it’s because the weather conditions are different. Weather drives the deal.”

Nevertheless, for those at the mercy of seasonal weather or extreme temperature swings, partnering with Mexico is a smart business decision.

As Pacific Produce’s Mark Vestal, puts it, “If you’re going to be a buyer, you need to have Mexico as part of your program—that’s the future.”

Image: Richard Laschon/Shutterstock.com

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