4.7 Article

Where does your guacamole come from? Detecting deforestation associated with the export of avocados from Mexico to the United States

Journal

JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
Volume 278, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2020.111482

Keywords

Avocado; Deforestation; Supply chain transparency; Governance; U.S-Mexico trade

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The United States imports 87% of its avocados from Michoacan, Mexico, but due to complex and opaque supply chains, American consumers and retailers struggle to recognize the environmental and social costs associated with avocado production. Research shows that avocado plantations in Michoacan are linked to deforestation, yet industry associates do not view avocado production as a driver of deforestation in the region.
The United States (U.S.) imports 87 percent of its avocados from a single Mexican region, Michoacan. Although environmental and social costs associated with avocado production are significant, consumers and retailers in the U.S. cannot clearly discern them in part due to complex, opaque supply chains. In this paper, we use a novel methodology, TRAcking Corporations Across Space and Time (TRACAST), to reconstruct avocado supply chains between the U.S. retailers and Mexican producers and exporters. Using remote sensing and machine learning, we document how avocado plantations are associated with deforestation in Michoacan, whose forests are important reservoirs for biodiversity, especially for the Monarch butterfly (Danaus plexippus). We estimate that-20% of the total deforestation in Michoacan between 2001 and 2017 is associated with the expansion of avocado plantations. Despite these impacts, interviews reveal that industry associates (namely, representatives of firms and associations) do not consider avocado production to be a driver of deforestation in the region. This disconnect between actual and perceived environmental impacts can be addressed by the U.S. governmental agencies that play influential roles in regulating avocado imports for sanitary and health purposes and by the vertically integrated avocado trading firms that connect Michoacan packing houses to Kroger, Costco, and other prominent U.S. grocers. Key measures to make the U.S.-Mexico avocado supply chain more sustainable include conventional regulatory tools, greater transparency, and improved governance through multi-stakeholder initiatives.

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