Mexico: Ending limit on the United States potatoes means growing market for Colorado farmers

Published 2022년 6월 15일

Tridge summary

Mexico is set to liberalize its restrictions on U.S. potato imports, permitting their sale across the nation, a significant shift from the previous policy that confined imports to a narrow region along the border. This development is anticipated to greatly benefit Colorado farmers, who are poised to see a surge in annual exports reaching up to $250 million within the next five years. This move follows a series of negotiations and legal disputes that date back to 1996, marking a milestone in U.S.-Mexico agricultural trade. The U.S. potato industry's optimism is buoyed by the potential to expand its market by 70 million customers, having advocated for these import rights since the late 1990s.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

Mexico is loosening restrictions on U.S. potato Imports, reversing limits that kept sales to border cities for decades and allowing spuds from the north to be sold across all of Mexico. Colorado farmers, particularly those in the San Luis Valley of southern Colorado where most of the state’s potatoes are grown, are poised to be the biggest winners. They see the chance to add tens of millions of dollars worth of annual exports in the coming years. "We're ready to roll," said James Ehrlich, executive director of the Colorado Potato Administrative Committee trade group. "It's an exciting opportunity — potentially 70 million new customers.” Colorado is the fifth-largest U.S. potato-growing state. Farmers in Colorado produce over half the fresh U.S. potatoes exported to Mexico, benefitting from proximity — other major potato-growing states being much farther north — and from growing a crop mainly of potato varieties for fresh vegetable sales, not for processing into manufactured foods. ...
Source: Argenpapa

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