Columbian Imports by U.S. Imports are Approved; Early Season Chilean Fruits are Now Arriving

Columbian Imports by U.S. Imports are Approved; Early Season Chilean Fruits are Now Arriving

01152018Columbian imported avocados are being introduced to the United States…Meanwhile, it is springtime in Chile and it’s that time of the year for arrivals of Chilean grapes and well as other fruits.

Last August the USDA approved hass avocados imports by the U.S. from Colombia.  It won’t be heavy volume for sure but observers see slow, but steady increases in 2018.  Colombian agriculture officials said in a news release that hass exports will start this month from a farm near Antioquia, a production area that has been approved for exports to the U.S.

Hass avocado exports from Colombia will increase by 20 percent to Europe and North America, according to the officials with the Colombian Agricultural and Livestock Institute. The USDA reports through November 2017,  imports of Columbian avocados totaled 29,300 metric tons.

The Columbian institute works with 33 hass avocado production sites including buffer areas.  After complying with plant health requirements put in place by USDA and Colombian officials, all those sites will be authorized to export to the U.S.

Chilean Fruit Imports

California grape shipments to U.S. markets are on their last leg.  Quality has been variable in recent weeks although plenty of pretty sweet grapes have been loaded for this late in the season.  As California finishes up it season, Chilean import grapes are already arriving by boat at U.S. ports, but at this point mostly at Philadelphia.  As fruit volume increases from Chile, other ports such as those at Los Angeles will begin receiving product.   It is early in the Chilean grape season and around 375 truckloads of the fruit are arriving weekly, but volume is increasing with the majority of the volume coming during the next couple of months.  Chilean peaches and plums also are coming in by boat, but in very light volume that also is increasing.

(Photo was taken by Bill Martin in January 1992 on a trip to Chile.  It was photographed at a grape packing plant in Northern Chile.)