The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Australian avocado prices soar as supply goes pear-shaped

-

SYDNEY: While prices for most Australian commoditie­s are bumping along the f loor, local avocados are fetching a king’s ransom thanks to hostile weather, strict quarantine laws and a Christmas binge.

Outside South and Central America, where the fruit is native, Australia has the highest percapita consumptio­n in the world, at an annual 3.2 kilogramme­s (kg), or about 15 fruits, according to industry body Avocados Australia.

But while Australian demand for the fruit has been fuelled by its store of healthy fats, supply has been strangled by heavy rain and bushfires, and because growers in western Australia, anticipati­ng a fall in demand after Christmas, exhausted their stocks to f lood the market in the lead-up to the holiday season.

That has sent the price as high as A$7 (US$5) per fruit, compared with just under US$1 in the US and around 1 pound (US$1.43) in Britain, prompting some wags in the grocery trade to tweak their usual warning to burglars to: “No cash or avocados are kept on premises overnight”.

One Mexican food truck in Sydney has resorted to what some critics say is sacrilege – using bulk-bought frozen avocado in its nachos and tacos to avoid over-reliance on the volatile market.

“We were at the mercy of growers and paying through the roof,” said Cantina Mobile owner Stephanie Raco.

Global consumptio­n of avocados, now a US$3 billion industry, has doubled in the last decade, and a third of the 3.8 million tonne annual harvest is currently traded internatio­nally, according to data from the Food and Agricultur­e Organisati­on of the United Nations.

But Australia’s determinat­ion to avoid bringing in pests, plant disease and weeds, means it takes very few of those.

So far, only neighbouri­ng New Zealand can sell its crop in Australia, supplying up to 15 per cent of domestic demand. Australia’s Department of Agricultur­e said Mexico and Chile have pending export applicatio­ns but declined to give a timeframe. Such deals can take years of negotiatio­ns.

The US, where demand has jumped from 0.7 kg per person in the 1990s to around 2kg now, has had similar production problems to Australia, with drought hitting the key growing state of California.

However, unlike Australia, the US has secured a large import network from Mexico to Peru and Chile and even as far as New Zealand to meet demand. Imports have doubled in the last decade, said Jan DeLyser, the spokeswoma­n for the California Avocado Commission.

Mexico, which advertises its products during the primetime Super Bowl game, is the world’s largest exporter and has been increasing production to keep up with growing global demand.

Michoacán, the largest avocado-producing area in Mexico, produced 1.2 million tonnes in 2014, a third of global output.

 ??  ?? Boxes of avocados are seen at a packaging warehouse of a plantation in Chincha, Peru, in this file photo. While prices for most Australian commoditie­s are bumping along the floor, local avocados are fetching a king’s ransom thanks to hostile weather,...
Boxes of avocados are seen at a packaging warehouse of a plantation in Chincha, Peru, in this file photo. While prices for most Australian commoditie­s are bumping along the floor, local avocados are fetching a king’s ransom thanks to hostile weather,...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia