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Despite Water Scarcity, Morocco Exports 100,000 Tons of Avocados Despite Water Scarcity, Morocco Exports 100,000 Tons of Avocados

Rabat – Morocco has quietly but firmly claimed a new place among the world’s key avocado exporters.  

For the first time, the country crossed the 100,000-ton mark in avocado exports, according to agricultural market platform EastFruit, an unprecedented milestone that signals Morocco’s growing influence in a market once dominated by Latin America.

This achievement comes amid a complex season. Global avocado prices have dropped due to an oversupply from producers in countries like Peru and Mexico.

Still, Moroccan growers managed to outperform expectations, helped by a combination of stable weather, high-quality harvests, and increasingly competitive logistics. 

In Europe, Morocco’s biggest export market, markets grew more crowded and prices more volatile.

But Morocco fared well. Rather than chasing quantity, producers focused on consistency and quality, two aspects that set their produce apart in a market environment characterized by high pressure and competition.

Morocco’s growing visibility on the international trade scene is a symptom of broader changes in the global avocado business. With more and more suppliers flooding the market, shoppers no longer place top priority on prices. Shelf life, appearance, and on-time delivery carry as much weight as price.

Demand remains strong, especially in Europe and North America, but the rules of the game have shifted. Morocco appears to understand this shift.

Read also: Morocco Is World’s 9th Largest Avocado Exporter Amid Water Scarcity

But such success comes at a price. Morocco’s rise to global leadership in the avocado market is paid for with growing environmental expenses.

Growing avocados is a water-intensive business that weighs heavily on a country already beset with regular droughts and worsening water shortages. With producers increasingly opening up more plantation land to meet overseas demand, concern grows about the sustainability of such development over the long term.

The tensions between economic opportunity and environmental responsibility remain to be addressed, especially in regions where water shortage is already the reality. The challenge for Morocco now is how to reconcile export drive and its actual need to save its natural resources.



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