information sage

musings about the Indian-American experience in the Information Age

28 February 2006
Finally, Indian mangoes in the US

Can-o-Mango
No more mutilated cans of mango pulp! Yay!

After 17 yrs, US set to let Indian mangoes enter supermarkets:
NEW DELHI, FEBRUARY 27: The separation of nuclear reactors may take its time but after 17 years of sheer perseverance from India, Washington has decided to open its markets to Indian mangoes.

This is one of the several announcements likely to sweeten the Bush visit with the US government agreeing to issue a draft notification to this effect back home. If all goes well, Indian mangoes will land in US markets in the next 18 months.

Preventing Indian mangoes from entering US supermarkets was the strict Sanitary and Phyto-Sanitary (SPS) conditions imposed by the US. Pests like pulp weevil and fruit fly are alien to US conditions. And the US was never confident about India’s capability to make the harvest pest-free.

Doors opened just a crack when a mechanism was set up following the PM’s US visit—the US-India Trade Policy Forum, a group headed by India’s Commerce Minister and US Trade Representative Rob Portman.

Several meetings later, the clincher was irradiation, the method to be now adopted to make mangoes pest-free. Earlier, it was limited to vapour treatment and quarantine.


menu

home

archives


September 2005

October 2005

November 2005

February 2006

March 2006

May 2006

August 2006

September 2006

October 2006

January 2007

May 2007

June 2007

categories

India
Bollywood
SciTech

of interest

rss feed
Blogger.com