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Mexican avocados: New year, new records

mex avo 2-13-20

As the Super Bowl remains the most watched television event in the United States each year, it is also a day when the most avocados are eaten, mainly in the form of guacamole.

So many avocados were bought and eaten that a new export record was once again set this year. Avocado exports totaled 33,814 tons the third week of January, as reported by The Association of Avocado Producers, Packers, and Exporters of Mexico (APEAM) to EFEAGRO, a Spanish agriculture reporting agency.

For comparison, Mexican avocado exports in January of 2019 reached 120,000 tons total, 20percent more than in 2018 (100,000 tons). A new overall increase is expected for January 2020 as exports to the U.S. in the third week were more than 50 percent higher than the usual rate of 22,000 tons as reported by APEAM.

Bosco de la Vega, the president of Mexico’s National Agricultural Council (CNA), stated to EFEAGRO that Mexico supplied almost 98 percent of the avocados that the United States imports and estimated the avocado consumption to be at 8,000 tons during the Super Bowl alone.

According to data provided by the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (Sader), small producers supply the majority of the avocado exported to the U.S., that being 64 percent.

This data shows that 41 percent of that production comes from 17,753 orchards by producers who own less than 5 hectares and 23 percent by small scale farmers in 9,959 orchards who own between 5.1-10 hectares.

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As the Super Bowl remains the most watched television event in the United States each year, it is also a day when the most avocados are eaten, mainly in the form of guacamole.

So many avocados were bought and eaten that a new export record was once again set this year. Avocado exports totaled 33,814 tons the third week of January, as reported by The Association of Avocado Producers, Packers, and Exporters of Mexico (APEAM) to EFEAGRO, a Spanish agriculture reporting agency.

For comparison, Mexican avocado exports in January of 2019 reached 120,000 tons total, 20percent more than in 2018 (100,000 tons). A new overall increase is expected for January 2020 as exports to the U.S. in the third week were more than 50 percent higher than the usual rate of 22,000 tons as reported by APEAM.

Bosco de la Vega, the president of Mexico’s National Agricultural Council (CNA), stated to EFEAGRO that Mexico supplied almost 98 percent of the avocados that the United States imports and estimated the avocado consumption to be at 8,000 tons during the Super Bowl alone.

According to data provided by the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (Sader), small producers supply the majority of the avocado exported to the U.S., that being 64 percent.

This data shows that 41 percent of that production comes from 17,753 orchards by producers who own less than 5 hectares and 23 percent by small scale farmers in 9,959 orchards who own between 5.1-10 hectares.

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Marco Campos is Media Coordinator, Latin America for Blue Book Services