Farms.com Home   Ag Industry News

U.S. hands over some ag inspections to Mexico

U.S. hands over some ag inspections to Mexico
Sep 27, 2024
By Diego Flammini
Assistant Editor, North American Content, Farms.com

Farmers are concerned about the integrity of Mexican inspections

Some ag products coming into the United States from Mexico won’t receive inspections from USDA.

On Sept. 16, Mexico announced that it and the U.S. came to an agreement that Mexican inspectors would handle examinations of Mexican avocado orchards and packinghouses with products destined for the U.S., instead of the USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS), which oversaw these inspections for almost 30 years.

“With this agreement, the U.S. health authority recognizes the commitment of Mexican producers, who for more than 27 years have not had health problems during the export process,” a translated Mexican release says.

The U.S. will participate in a “documentary manner,” the release adds.

APHIS employs around 100 inspectors annually to inspect Mexican orchards, a Climate Rights International report says.

Avocado producers are unhappy with this decision.

The California Avocado Commission (CAC) discovered the new ruling from Mexican media two days after the Mexican government made the announcement.

Not only did this decision occur without industry consultation, but the integrity of the Mexican inspections needs to be questioned, the organization says.

“We expected and believe we are entitled to better treatment from APHIS,” the organization said in a Sept. 23 letter to Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack. “The pest prevention program adopted by APHIS decades ago has worked in large measure because APHIS inspectors have been directly involved in all significant aspects of the program’s operation beginning with orchard certification. It is well known that their physical presence greatly reduces the opportunity of others to “game the system””.

To date, the USDA hasn’t explained its reason for the switch or how it will ensure avocados entering the U.S. are safe – both issues the CAC demands answers for in its letter.

APHIS inspectors have been targeted in Mexico for their avocado inspections.

In June of this year, for example, the USDA suspended avocado inspections for about a week after two employees were attacked and detained.

The USDA suspended inspections in February 2022 as well after an American plant safety inspector in Michoacan received a threatening message. That suspension also lasted about a week.


Trending Video

Could Seed Technology Lead the Fight Against Drought in Farming?

Video: Could Seed Technology Lead the Fight Against Drought in Farming?

Seed is life, but water is the critical component to promoting that potential. As the seed sector navigates more and more extreme weather, ensuring each planted seed has access to adequate moisture is a critical — arguably, the MOST critical — component of early season success. A group of Slovakian scientists has recently introduced to the market a potential solution: a superabsorbent polymer seed coating technology that captures and delivers moisture directly to the seed. The company is PeWaS (aka: Permanent Watering Solutions), and the technology is Aquaholder. How does it work, what kind of difference could it make, and — more broadly — how might seed treatments as a whole change the game for big challenges like drought mitigation? We sat down with PeWaS’s CEO, Ivo Krpelan, to find out. If you're curious about the future of seed technology and sustainable farming, this is a conversation you won’t want to miss.