Tag: apeda

  • The Night Shift: What Happens at a Mango Packing House in Andhra Pradesh

    The Night Shift: What Happens at a Mango Packing House in Andhra Pradesh

    It is 1:00 AM in Kurnool, Andhra Pradesh. The temperature has finally dropped below 90°F. A truck pulls into the loading bay of an APEDA-registered pack house carrying 2,000 kilograms of Banginapalli mangoes, picked that morning from orchards 40 kilometers away.

    In 30 hours, some of these mangoes will be on a plane to the United States.

    This is the story of what happens in between — and why your box of Indian mangoes costs what it costs.


    1:00 AM — Arrival and First Sort

    Mangoes arrive in plastic crates stacked on open trucks. They were picked at dawn — at the “mature but unripe” stage, when the shoulder of the fruit has filled out but the skin is still firm. This is intentional. A fully ripe mango would never survive the journey.

    Workers unload the crates by hand under fluorescent lights. The first sort happens immediately:

    • Reject pile: Any mango with visible bruising, insect damage, latex burn, or irregular shape. These go to the domestic market.
    • Grade A (Export): Uniform size, clean skin, correct color, no blemishes. Only the top 10–15% of the harvest makes this grade.
    • Grade B (Domestic premium): Good fruit that does not meet export standards — slightly uneven size or minor cosmetic marks.

    For every 10 mangoes that arrive, only 1 or 2 will end up in a box headed to Texas.


    2:00 AM — Washing and Treatment

    Export-grade mangoes are washed in a chlorinated water bath to remove field dirt and surface bacteria. They are then dipped in a fungicide solution (within APEDA-approved limits) to prevent anthracnose — a fungal disease that can develop during transit.

    Each mango is handled individually. There are no conveyor belts here. A worker picks up each fruit, inspects it under light one more time, and places it on a drying rack.


    3:00 AM — Grading by Hand

    This is where the real skill happens. Experienced graders — most of them women who have been doing this for years — sort mangoes by size and weight using their hands.

    For Banginapalli:

    • Small: Under 250g — not exported
    • Medium: 250–350g — standard export
    • Large: 350–450g — premium export
    • Extra Large: Above 450g — rare, highest price

    Each grade goes into its own tray. A good grader can sort 500 mangoes per hour by touch alone. They know, by the weight in their palm, whether a mango is 280g or 320g.


    4:00 AM — Wrapping and Packing

    Close-up of weathered hands carefully wrapping a golden mango in tissue paper for export

    Each mango is individually wrapped in tissue paper or a foam net. This is not for presentation — it is for protection. A single bruise from fruit-to-fruit contact during a 9,000-mile journey will cause that mango to rot before it reaches Texas.

    Mangoes are packed into corrugated cardboard boxes designed specifically for air freight. The boxes have ventilation holes for airflow and internal dividers to prevent movement. A standard export box holds 3–4 kilograms, depending on the variety.

    Every box is stamped with:

    • APEDA registration number
    • Exporter details
    • Variety name
    • Grade and weight
    • “Product of India”

    5:00 AM — Cold Room Storage

    Packed boxes go into a cold room maintained at 12–13°C (about 54°F). This slows the ripening process without stopping it — cold enough to preserve, warm enough to not cause chilling injury.

    The mangoes will stay here until the truck leaves for the irradiation facility, usually later that day or the next morning.


    The Irradiation Stop

    Boxes are transported to a USDA-APHIS approved irradiation facility — facilities like KRUSHAK in Lasalgaon or BRIT in Navi Mumbai. Here, mangoes undergo gamma irradiation at 400 Gray to eliminate quarantine pests (primarily fruit flies).

    This step is non-negotiable for any Indian mango entering the United States. It adds cost, time, and a logistical bottleneck (there are only a handful of approved facilities in India), but it is what makes the entire trade possible.

    After irradiation, each box receives the Radura symbol and treatment documentation.


    The Flight

    Irradiated boxes are trucked to the airport — typically Mumbai (BOM) or Hyderabad (HYD). They are loaded into temperature-controlled air cargo containers and flown to the United States.

    Flight time: approximately 18–22 hours including layovers.

    Common arrival airports: JFK (New York), Newark, or O’Hare (Chicago). From there, they are distributed to regional hubs across the country.


    The Last Mile — Texas

    When mangoes arrive at our hub in Round Rock, Texas, we open boxes to check quality. We organize by variety and by customer order. Then our network of pickup agents across Austin, Dallas, Houston, and San Antonio distribute to families — often within hours.

    From the tree in Kurnool to your kitchen counter in Texas: roughly 72–96 hours. Every step handled by human hands. No automation. No shortcuts.


    Why This Matters

    Next time you open a box of Indian mangoes and wonder about the price, remember the midnight grading. The hand-wrapping. The woman who sorted 500 mangoes by weight using just her palm. The 9,000-mile cold chain. The irradiation facility. The air freight.

    You are not paying for a fruit. You are paying for a small miracle of logistics and human care that gets a perishable, delicate fruit from a farm in rural India to your suburb in Texas — in three days, intact and beautiful.

    That is what makes every box worth it.


    References


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  • How Indian Mangoes Reach Texas: The USDA Import Process Explained

    How Indian Mangoes Reach Texas: The USDA Import Process Explained

    Every box of Indian mangoes that reaches Texas has traveled over 9,000 miles, passed through multiple government inspections, undergone USDA-mandated treatment, and survived international air freight — all within a window of days, not weeks. The process is fascinating, heavily regulated, and designed to guarantee that the fruit you eat is safe, pest-free, and fresh.

    Here is exactly how it works, from orchard to your pickup point in Austin, Dallas, Houston, or San Antonio.


    Step 1: Harvest and Selection in India

    Infographic showing mango journey from Indian orchard to irradiation to airplane to USDA inspection to Texas delivery

    Indian mangoes destined for the US market are harvested from APEDA-registered orchards (Agricultural and Processed Food Products Export Development Authority). Only the top 10–15% of each harvest qualifies for export.

    • Alphonso is sourced primarily from Ratnagiri and Devgad districts in Maharashtra’s Konkan coast.
    • Banginapalli comes from the Kurnool and Ulavapadu districts of Andhra Pradesh — the official home of its Geographical Indication (GI) tag (registered 2017).
    • Kesar is harvested from the Junagadh and Gir region of Gujarat (GI-tagged since 2011).

    Fruit is hand-picked at the mature but unripe stage — this is intentional. Mangoes picked at full maturity but before ripening survive the journey better and ripen uniformly at their destination.

    Source: APEDA (apeda.gov.in) exporter guidelines; Geographical Indications Registry, Chennai (ipindia.gov.in/gi).


    Step 2: USDA-Mandated Irradiation

    This is the step that makes Indian mango imports to the US possible — and the step that generates the most questions.

    Why Irradiation?

    India is home to fruit fly species (Bactrocera dorsalis and related Tephritidae) that are classified as quarantine pests by USDA-APHIS (Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service). If these pests were introduced to the US, they could devastate American agriculture. Irradiation eliminates this risk.

    How It Works

    Mangoes are exposed to a controlled dose of gamma radiation at 400 Gray (Gy) at USDA-APHIS approved facilities in India. Key facilities include:

    • KRUSHAK (Krushi Utpadan Sanrakshan Kendra) in Lasalgaon, Maharashtra
    • BRIT (Board of Radiation and Isotope Technology) facility in Vashi, Navi Mumbai

    The process takes only minutes and does not:

    • Make the fruit radioactive
    • Change the taste or texture
    • Significantly alter nutritional content
    • Leave any chemical residue

    Is It Safe?

    Food irradiation is endorsed as safe by:

    • World Health Organization (WHO)
    • U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
    • USDA
    • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)

    Over 60 countries approve irradiation for various foods. The technology has been studied for over 50 years.

    Why Not Hot Water Treatment?

    Mexico and several other countries use hot water treatment (VHT) — immersing mangoes in 46.1°C water for 70–90 minutes — as their pest elimination method. This is cheaper than irradiation.

    However, USDA-APHIS has not approved VHT for Indian mangoes. One reason: premium varieties like Alphonso have thin, delicate skin that is particularly sensitive to heat damage. India opted for irradiation during the 2004–2007 trade negotiations specifically to protect Alphonso quality.

    This is also why Indian mangoes cost more than Mexican mangoes — irradiation infrastructure is expensive, and only a few approved facilities exist in India, creating a capacity bottleneck during peak season.

    Source: USDA-APHIS Federal Import Quarantine Orders; 7 CFR 319.56; APHIS Treatment Manual T105; FAO/IAEA reports on food irradiation.


    Step 3: Phytosanitary Certification

    Before leaving India, each shipment must receive a phytosanitary certificate from India’s Directorate of Plant Protection, Quarantine & Storage (DPPQS) under the Ministry of Agriculture. This certifies that:

    • The mangoes come from registered orchards and pack houses
    • Irradiation was performed at a USDA-approved facility
    • The fruit is free of soil, leaves, stems, and visible pest damage
    • All APHIS protocols have been followed

    Irradiated boxes carry the Radura symbol — the international food irradiation logo — along with the treatment facility details.


    Step 4: Air Freight to the United States

    Indian mangoes are air-freighted — not shipped by sea. Sea freight takes 3–4 weeks and would destroy the fruit. Air freight gets mangoes from Mumbai or Hyderabad to US airports in 18–24 hours.

    Common arrival points include:

    • John F. Kennedy International Airport (JFK), New York
    • Newark Liberty International Airport (EWR)
    • O’Hare International Airport (ORD), Chicago

    The air freight cost is a significant portion of the final price — this is why Indian mangoes cost more than Mexican mangoes, which are trucked across the border.


    Step 5: USDA Port-of-Entry Inspection

    Upon arrival in the US, each shipment undergoes inspection by USDA-APHIS Plant Protection and Quarantine (PPQ) officers at the port of entry. They verify:

    • Phytosanitary certificate is valid
    • Irradiation documentation matches the shipment
    • Radura symbol and treatment facility details are on the packaging
    • Random sample inspection for pest evidence

    Only after clearing this inspection are the mangoes released for domestic distribution.


    Step 6: Distribution to Texas

    Once cleared by USDA at the port of entry, mangoes are distributed to regional hubs across the country. For Texas customers ordering through Swadeshi Mangoes, the fruit arrives at our hub in Round Rock, Texas and is immediately organized by variety and order.

    From there, boxes go to our network of 30+ community pickup agents across Austin, Dallas-Fort Worth, Houston, and San Antonio. Customers receive a WhatsApp notification when their order is ready, and pick up directly from their local agent — often within hours of the fruit arriving at our hub.

    This final-mile approach is critical: Indian mangoes are not designed for extended shelf life. The faster they get from our hub to your kitchen, the better they taste.


    India’s Mango Exports to the US: By the Numbers

    MetricData
    India’s total mango production~20–21 million metric tons/year (~45% of global production)
    Percentage exported as fresh fruitLess than 1%
    Fresh mango exports to US (2024 season)Estimated 2,500–3,000 metric tons
    Year-over-year export growth~10–20%
    Year Indian mangoes first entered the US2007
    Top exporting states to USMaharashtra (#1), Uttar Pradesh (#2), Andhra Pradesh (#3), Gujarat (#4)
    APEDA-registered mango exporters200+
    GI-tagged mango varietiesBanginapalli (2017), Gir Kesar (2011), Dasheri (2009), Jardalu (2018), and others

    Sources: APEDA (apeda.gov.in) export statistics; USDA FAS GATS data; National Horticulture Board of India; FAO production statistics.


    GI-Tagged Varieties: Guaranteed Authenticity

    A Geographical Indication (GI) tag works like an appellation for wine — it certifies that a product comes from a specific region with qualities unique to that place. Several Indian mango varieties carry GI tags:

    VarietyRegionGI Year
    BanginapalliKurnool, Andhra Pradesh2017
    Gir KesarJunagadh/Gir, Gujarat2011
    DasheriLucknow, Uttar Pradesh2009
    JardaluBhagalpur, Bihar2018
    Khirsapati (Himsagar)Murshidabad, West Bengal2017
    Laxman BhogMalda, West Bengal2017

    When we say our Banginapalli comes from Kurnool or our Alphonso comes from Ratnagiri, these are not just marketing claims — they are verifiable origins tied to India’s GI registry.

    Source: Geographical Indications Registry, Chennai (ipindia.gov.in/gi).


    Frequently Asked Questions

    Does irradiation make mangoes radioactive?

    No. Irradiation exposes food to controlled energy — similar to how an X-ray passes through your body without making you radioactive. The mangoes do not retain any radiation. This is confirmed by the WHO, FDA, USDA, and CDC.

    Does irradiation affect the taste of Indian mangoes?

    No significant impact on taste has been documented. The irradiation dose used for Indian mangoes (400 Gy) is relatively low. Some studies report slight softening of the fruit, but flavor, aroma, and nutritional content remain intact.

    Why were Indian mangoes banned in the US before 2007?

    They were not specifically “banned” — but the US did not have an approved phytosanitary treatment protocol for Indian mangoes until 2007. The concern was fruit fly contamination. Once irradiation was approved as a treatment method, the trade opened. It took years of bilateral negotiations between USDA-APHIS and India’s DPPQS to establish the protocols.

    Why are Indian mangoes more expensive than Mexican mangoes?

    Three main factors: (1) Air freight from India vs. truck transport from Mexico, (2) Irradiation costs vs. cheaper hot water treatment, and (3) Limited seasonal window (8–12 weeks vs. year-round). The total landed cost per box is significantly higher than domestic alternatives.

    How long do Indian mangoes last after I pick them up?

    Unripe mangoes will ripen in 2–4 days at room temperature. Once ripe, consume within 2–3 days or refrigerate to extend life by another 2–3 days. For storage tips, see our Mango Care Guide.


    References


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