Easy peelers drive more than quarter jump in SH citrus exports over last decade

Published 2020년 9월 28일

Tridge summary

Southern hemisphere citrus exports have seen a significant increase of 27% from 2.6m metric tons in 2010 to 3.3m metric tons in 2019, with the European Union being the largest importer. The growth is primarily driven by the easy peeler category, which has seen a 10% annual growth over the last five years, with North America importing the largest volumes. Chile, Peru, and South Africa are the leading exporters to North America, Europe, and Asia respectively.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

Citrus exports from the southern hemisphere have risen by more than a quarter over the last decade, with the European market and the easy peeler category driving much of the growth, according to data from the World Citrus Organization (WCO). Shipments from the region - which includes South Africa, Peru, Chile, and Argentina - grew by 27% from 2.6m metric tons (MT) in 2010 to 3.3m MT in 2019, with the majority of the growth coming after 2014, Peruvian website Agraria reports. The region with the highest share of southern hemisphere citrus imports is the European Union with 34%. Next is Asia with 24%, North America with 18%, the Middle East with 13% and Eastern Europe with 7%. The easy peeler category has been responsible for most of the growth. In 2008 there was a volume of 342,000MT of mandarins and tangelos traded worldwide from the southern hemisphere. In 2014 this figure increased slightly to 465,000MT. However, to 2019 there was an increase to more than 739,000MT, representing ...

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