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Scope
Commodity Coverage
Country Eligibility
FAO Data
Scope
This data product combines data from ERS, USDA's Animal
and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS), the United
Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), and the
World Bank. The data provide information on which
countries producing specific fresh fruits and vegetables
were eligible to export to the United States as of February
2007. Data on the absolute and relative importance
of these countries in international fruit and vegetable
production and trade, individually and in aggregate, are
also included. The development status of the countries
that are eligible to export to the United States is indicated,
along with the ranking of each commodity in U.S. production
and disappearance data.
Commodity Coverage
The commodities in this data product include 29 fruits
and 28 vegetables for which ERS conducts market analysis.
These commodities are included in the Census of Agriculture,
which is published by USDA's National Agricultural Statistics
Service (NASS), and represent the commodities Americas
consumed most.
Included here are only those fruits and vegetables sold
and consumed fresh. This data product does not include
dry edible beans nor fruits and vegetables that have been
dried, canned, or otherwise processed. The Commodity
Concordance provides detailed information on how product
categories are defined
in this data product compared to definitions used by APHIS,
FAO and ERS in other data products. When possible,
eligibility, production, and export data are presented
for each commodity separately.
For more information on individual commodities, see the
ERS Fruit and
Tree Nuts and Vegetables
and Melons briefing rooms. In this data
product, melons and olives are classified as fruit. In
ERS market analysis, olives are classified as fruit and
melons as vegetables.
Commodity Disappearance and Production Data
and Ranking
ERS calculates product availability or disappearance
data for fresh fruits and vegetables, potatoes, sweet
potatoes, and mushrooms in similar ways. Domestic
production numbers are added to imports to obtain a total
supply figure. The U.S. export volume is subtracted
from this total supply to calculate net domestic use that
is then divided by the July 1 estimate of U.S. population
(including overseas Armed Forces). The disappearance
data obtained this way are the per capita proxy for consumption.
In the case of commodities that can be used for seed,
such as potatoes, a seed use estimate is also subtracted
from total production. For mushrooms, a population
estimate at January 1 is used instead of July 1 to account
for mushroom seasonality. For more information on
calculation of disappearance data, see Food
Availability: Documentation.
In the summary tables for Fruits and Vegetables,
commodities were ranked by their disappearance data for
2004 according to the
Food Availability Spreadsheets. The disappearance
numbers in each summary table represent the ranking of
each commodity within the subgroup of either Fruits or
Vegetables.
The U.S. production quantities for the commodities in
this data product were taken from the Fruit
and Tree Nuts Yearbook and Vegetables
and Melons Yearbook data tables. Production quantities
for 2004 were sorted and ranked to determine the relative
production rank of each commodity within the Fruit or
Vegetable subgroup.
Country Eligibility
APHIS is the source of data on countries eligible to
export fresh fruits and vegetables to the United States.
The phytosanitary requirements for each country and commodity
are published as final rules in the Code of Federal Regulations
(7CFR 319.56 Subpart-Fruits and Vegetables or Q56).
These rules are developed throughout the year and are
subject to change. For the most current information on
commodities eligible to import from a specific country,
contact
APHIS.
APHIS publishes proposed and
final rules in the Federal Register for public
comment, in accordance with the Administrative Procedure
Act. A simplified summary of the rulemaking process
followed by APHIS is presented in the chart Rule
Development and Clearance Process. On June 17,
2007, APHIS announced revisions to Q56 that will simplify
and expedite the APHIS process for approving new imports
and pest-free areas, but do not alter how the risks associated
with fruits and vegetables are evaluated or mitigated.
More information on these revisions is available at the APHIS
Quarantine 56 Newsroom.
The commodities eligible to enter the United States from
each country are listed in the Fresh
Fruits and Vegetables Import Manual, which covers
all fresh fruits and vegetables imported for consumption.
The manual also contains detailed post-harvest treatment
requirements and port-of-entry and distribution restrictions
for imported fresh fruits and vegetables.
It is important to note that selected commodities may
be exported only from certain areas in the producing country
that are certified as being free of specific pests of
concern. For example, avocados from Mexico
can only be exported from producers located in the state
of Michoacán. Because there is no international
source for production and trade data by region within
countries, this data product uses national totals published
by FAO. This implies that the statistics
on the percentage of production or trade eligible to enter
the United States should be considered an upper bound.
Country Classification
The term "country" in this data product refers
to countries, areas, and territories that APHIS identifies
as eligible to export fresh fruits and vegetables to the
United States. Available FAO production and trade
data for these exporters are reported to provide information
on their absolute and relative importance in global markets
for fresh fruits and vegetables.
FAO does not always report separate production and trade
statistics for 17 eligible exporters because they are
territories, departments, or another type of political
dependency of a United Nations member (see table below).
For example, French Guiana is a department of France.
Data for Hong Kong and Taiwan are reported separately
from data for mainland China in some FAOSTAT
databases, e.g., detailed production data in ProdStat,
but not others. FAO does not report data for Western
Sahara. See FAOSTAT
Country Classifications for more information.
| Eligible location (APHIS) |
Larger
political entity (FAO) |
| Anguilla
|
United Kingdom |
Aruba |
Netherlands |
Bermuda |
United Kingdom |
Cayman Islands
|
United Kingdom |
French Guiana
|
France |
French Polynesia
|
France |
Guadeloupe
|
France |
Guam |
United States |
Hong Kong
|
China |
Martinique
|
France |
Montenegro
|
None |
Montserrat |
United Kingdom |
Netherlands
Antilles |
Netherlands |
Saint Barthelemy |
Guadeloupe/France |
Saint Martin |
Guadeloupe/France |
Taiwan (Republic
of China) |
China |
Turks and
Caicos Islands |
United Kingdom |
Virgin Islands
(British) |
United Kingdom |
|
Western Sahara |
Not in FAO
data |
Country Income Level
Countries were identified as high- or middle-to-low income
using the 2005
World Development Indicators developed and published
by the World Bank.
The World Bank classifies member countries and other countries
with populations greater than 30,000 as low income, lower
middle income, upper middle income, and high income based
on per capita gross national income (GNI).
World Bank classification criteria and data on per capita
gross domestic product (GDP) from the Central Intelligence
Agency's World
Factbook were used to identify the income level
of 10 countries—Anguilla, British Virgin Islands,
Cook Islands, French Guiana, Guadeloupe, Martinique, Montenegro,
Montserrat, Taiwan, and Turks and Caicos—not included
in World Bank data.
FAO Data
Data on production quantities, export quantities and
export value for each commodity and country was obtained
from FAOSTAT,
FAO's statistical databases. FAO compiles data from
approximately 200 core reporting nations.
FAO data only include production and export quantities
of 0.5 metric tons and greater and totals and percentages
reflect this limitation. In the Excel files for individual
commodities, a "0" for production and/or export
quantity includes volumes less than 0.5 metric tons.
In a few cases, countries exporting a commodity do not
produce it domestically, according to FAO production and
trade data. In other instances, the quantity of
reported exports exceeds the quantity of reported domestic
production. These anomalies in the data could be
due to transshipments or other reasons. For more
information, see "Notes to the WATM" on the
FAOSTAT World
Agricultural Trade Matrix (WATM) page.
The percent of world production and export quantities
eligible to enter the United States was calculated by
dividing the sum of eligible production and exports by
total world production and exports, respectively.
These percentages will exceed the percentages of global
production and exports that are actually shipped to the
United States since countries generally do not export
all that they produce and have multiple trading partners.
The median and average (mean) world production and export
quantities are calculated for each commodity for all countries
in the FAOSTAT database. The median—the value for
which half of all values in a series are greater and half
are smaller—and average—the sum of all numbers
in a series divided by the total number of entries in
that series—is reported for both production and
exports to provide reference for the relative ranking
of those countries eligible to export to the United States.
For detailed information on U.S. imports and exports,
see USDA Foreign Agricultural Service's U.S.
Trade Internet System. For summary information,
see ERS's Foreign
Agricultural Trade of the United States data product.
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