Value and growth of tropical fruits
Global production of tropical fruits has grown steadily over the past decade, predominantly in response to increasing demand in major producer areas. While tropical fruits play a small role in global agricultural trade in overall quantities, accounting for a mere 3 percent of world agricultural food products exports, their high average export unit value is well above USD 1 000 per tonne and places them as the third most valuable fruit group globally, behind bananas and apples. Trade in tropical fruits generates a substantial income for smallholder producers, as well as significant export earnings for many of the producing countries, thereby contributing to their food security.
Current releases
Publications
Food Outlook – Biannual Report on Global Food Markets - June 2023
15/06/2023
FAO’s latest forecasts point to increases in production and higher stocks across several basic foodstuffs. However, global food production systems remain vulnerable to shocks, stemming from weather conditions, geopolitical tensions and policies, potentially tipping the delicate demand-supply balances, with implications for global food security.
Food Outlook - June 2022
12/06/2023
In view of the soaring input prices,concerns about the weather, and increased market uncertainties stemming from the war in Ukraine, FAO’s latest forecasts point to a likely tightening of food markets in 2022.
Commodity in focus
With around 2 700 species, tropical fruits are not only a source of nutrition, but also of income generation for farmers who produce them for export. | |
In global commodity trade, tropical fruits constitute a comparatively new group and since 1970, they have emerged as significant in the international marketplace. | |
Export volumes of fresh tropical fruits display the fastest average annual growth rates among internationally traded food commodities. | |
Advances in transportation, trade agreements and shifting consumer preferences in favour of these fruits led to trade growth. | |
Tropical fruits are highly perishable during production and distribution, and so environmental challenges are among the key obstacles to sustaining production and ensuring that international markets are supplied. | |
Increasingly, erratic weather events are a particularly acute challenge to growing tropical fruits because the vast majority are produced on smallholder farms of less than 5 ha where cultivation is highly dependent on rainfall. |
| An estimated 99 percent of tropical fruit production originates in
developing countries, predominantly in Asia and Latin America and a
smaller share in Africa. |
| In most producing zones, tropical fruits continue to be cultivated at the subsistence rather than the commercial level. |
| The combined exports of the four major tropical fruits represent only 5 percent of total production volume, and the remainder is consumed or otherwise utilized domestically. |
See also
Related links
- Committee on Commodity Problems (CCP)
- FAO Intergovernmental Group on Bananas and Tropical Fruits
- International Year of Fruits and Vegetables (IYFV)
- Global trade in bananas
- Global Commodity Markets
More on the topic
- Responsible Business Conduct (RBC) in Agriculture
- OECD-FAO Guidance for Responsible Agricultural Supply Chains
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