Peru: The discouraging outlook for fresh blueberries is accentuated every week

Published Dec 9, 2023

Tridge summary

Despite efforts, the weekly shipments of fresh blueberries have not exceeded 15,000 tons in the past 8 months, compared to over 20,000 tons at the same time last year. The atypical Peruvian blueberry season has resulted in a 16% increase in shipments compared to last year, but a 7% decrease from the previous week. The United States, the Netherlands, and China are the top buyers, but all three have seen significant declines in purchases this season, with the US experiencing a 38% drop in purchases compared to last year.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

After eight months of the campaign, weekly shipments of fresh blueberries have not been able to overcome the barrier of 15,000 tons; while, at this time last year, they had already exceeded 20,000 tons exported. This discouraging scenario for the product has continued its trend and is expected to continue in the coming weeks. In this last week, fruit shipments totaled 10,123 tons, which despite being 16% higher than last year, was 7% lower than the previous week. However, it is worth highlighting that this positive growth compared to last year would be nothing more nor less than the results of this atypical Peruvian blueberry season, since given the delay that this campaign has presented, the gap—compared to the previous one— it becomes wider. During the week, the product reached 17 destinations, of which the main ones were the United States, with 59% share (5,941 tons); followed by the Netherlands, with 24% (2,462 tons), and the United Kingdom, with 7% (705 tons). Regarding the ...

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