US to hand over pest inspections of Mexican avocados to Mexico and
California growers aren't happy
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[September 25, 2024] MEXICO
CITY (AP) — California avocado growers are fuming this week about a U.S.
decision to hand over pest inspections of Mexican orchards to the
Mexican government.
Inspectors hired by the U.S. Department of Agriculture have been
guarding against imports of avocados infected with insects and diseases
since 1997, but they have also been threatened in Mexico for refusing to
certify deceptive shipments in recent years.
Threats and violence against inspectors have caused the U.S. to suspend
inspections in the past, and California growers question whether
Mexico’s own inspectors would be better equipped to withstand such
pressure.
"This action reverses the long-established inspection process designed
to prevent invasions of known pests in Mexico that would devastate our
industry," the California Avocado Commission wrote in an open letter to
U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack on Monday.
At present, inspectors work for the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s
Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, known as APHIS. Because the
United States also grows avocados, U.S. inspectors observe orchards and
packing houses in Mexico to ensure exported avocados don’t carry pests
that could hurt U.S. crops.
“It is well known that their physical presence greatly reduces the
opportunity of others to game the system,” the avocado commission wrote.
”What assurances can APHIS provide us that its unilateral reversal of
the process will be equal to or better than what has protected us?"
The letter added, "We are looking for specifics as to why you have
concluded that substituting APHIS inspectors with Mexican government
inspectors is in our best interest."
The decision was announced last week in a short statement by Mexico's
Agriculture Department, which claimed that “with this agreement, the
U.S. health safety agency is recognizing the commitment of Mexican
growers, who in more than 27 years have not had any sanitary problems in
exports.”
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A worker packs avocados at a plant in Uruapan, Michoacan state,
Mexico, Feb. 9, 2024. (AP Photo/Armando Solis, File)
The idea that there have been no
problems is far from the truth.
In 2022, inspections were halted after one of the U.S. inspectors
was threatened in the western state of Michoacan, where growers are
routinely subject to extortion by drug cartels. Only the states of
Michoacan and Jalisco are certified to export avocados to the United
States.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture said at the time that the
inspector had received a threat “against him and his family.”
The inspector had “questioned the integrity of a certain shipment,
and refused to certify it based on concrete issues,” according to
the USDA statement. Some packers in Mexico buy avocados from other,
non-certified states, and try to pass them off as being from
Michoacan.
Sources at the time said the 2022 threat involved a grower demanding
the inspector certify more avocados than his orchard was physically
capable of producing, suggesting that at least some had been
smuggled in from elsewhere.
And in June, two USDA employees were assaulted and temporarily held
by assailants in Michoacan. That led the U.S. to suspend inspections
in Mexico’s biggest avocado-producing state.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture did not immediately respond to
questions about why the decision was made, or whether it was related
to the threats.
Mexico currently supplies about 80% of U.S. imports of the fruit.
Growers in the U.S. can't supply the country's whole demand, nor
provide fruit year-round.
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