Texas Produce Shipments to Loom Larger in Future

Texas Produce Shipments to Loom Larger in Future

While Texans tend to boast about how big everything is in the Lone Star State, it is a major shipper of fresh produce, ranking in the top 10  for its volume with fresh fruits and vegetables.  Many  Texas produce shippers also have invested in farming operations in Mexico, and a lot of the product crosses the border into the Lower Rio Grande Valley for distribution throughout the USA and Canada.

The valley, and more specifically, Pharr, TX will be even more important in the future as a distribution point for Mexican grown produce.  It is located on Highway 281 which runs north all the way into Canada.  Also of importance is the 3.2-mile-long  Pharr-Reynosa International Bridge connecting Mexico and south Texas.  It is the longest port-of-entry bridge.

While Pharr remains relatively small with a population of 75,000 residents, the city has purchased 90 acres just west of the bridge with aim of developing a produce district with warehouses for produce destined for shipping throughout North America.

Pharr also will gain importance with the completion of the Autopista Durango-Mazatlan cross continental Mexican highway.  It is a 143-mile-long stretch of highway scheduled for completion by the end of this year.  It was built with the intention of trucks hauling West Mexican produce to ports of entry in Texas.  The new highway ends very near Pharr.

The new road is supposed to reduce transit times of trucks from West Mexico by a full day to points in the eastern half of the USA and Canada.

The state of Texas, not including Mexico, grows and ships over 70 different fruits, vegetables and nuts.  It is the fourth ranking shipper of watermelons in the USA, accounting for 15 percent of the country’s watermelons.  This time of the year Lower Rio Grande Valley grapefruit becomes a major item for loads.

The Lone Star State also is a major grower/shipper of  onions,  cabbage, spinach, and carrots.