Argentina: Pistachio poses new opportunities and challenges

Published Sep 14, 2024

Tridge summary

Argentina has seen a significant surge in pistachio cultivation in the past five years, with a more than 500% increase in cultivated hectares, primarily in San Juan province. The country is working to identify and characterize climatic limitations for pistachio development through the National Network for the Study of Pistachio in Argentina, focusing on the Kerman cultivar. This network is developing a map to identify areas of high suitability, intermediate suitability, and unsuitable areas for pistachio cultivation, using unique statistical methodology and local data.
Disclaimer: The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

In recent years, pistachios have become an essential food for consumers seeking a healthier diet and are a trendy and innovative ingredient in regional gastronomy. The high demand for pistachios and the limited local supply partly explain the high prices that production reaches, higher than that of other nuts such as walnuts and almonds. The pistachio tree has many characteristics that make it a special crop. One of its peculiarities is that it requires arid environments with cold winters and very warm summer periods. There are few growing areas in the world where it can be developed, these are: the Middle East, the United States, Spain, Italy, Greece, Australia and Argentina. Pistachio production is relatively new in Argentina. The first plantations took place in San Juan at the end of the 1980s, when the first seeds were sown, but it was not until the mid-1990s with the regulation of the National Law 22.021 on tax deferrals that the commercial development of the crop took place ...
Source: MXfruit
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