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Mexico is successful the mango battle and Mukesh Ambani’s farm in Jamnagar could possibly be India’s reply


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India produces extra mangoes than any nation on Earth. But within the international export market, it ranks a fourth, behind international locations that develop a fraction of what India does. 

In a current deep-dive, wealth advisory agency FinFloww laid out the numbers and the irony: Mexico exports 22.5% of its mangoes and earns $575 million, whereas India exports a meagre 0.13%, pulling in simply $148 million—regardless of producing over 26 million tons yearly.

And right here’s the place it will get crazier: Mexico began large-scale mango cultivation solely 35 years in the past. India? Over 4,000 years.

So what’s going improper?

In response to FinFloww’s thread on X, it’s a deadly mixture of poor chilly chain infrastructure, fragmented farms, regulatory pink tape, and mango varieties poorly suited to international markets. 

As a lot as 40% of India’s mango harvest rots earlier than reaching shoppers as a consequence of an absence of recent storage and transport methods. In the meantime, international locations like Mexico have constructed export machines—optimized varieties, coordinated farming, and robust institutional assist.

However a significant disruption might already be underway. FinFloww highlights Mukesh Ambani’s “Aamnagar” venture in Jamnagar, the place Reliance Industries has quietly constructed Asia’s largest mango orchard: 600 acres, over 130,000 timber, and greater than 200 mango varieties. 

By investing in superior farming strategies, global-quality produce, and full vertical integration, Reliance has develop into certainly one of Asia’s main mango exporters—if not by worth, definitely by imaginative and prescient.

Is that this India’s “Jio second” in agriculture?

FinFloww thinks it may be. Simply as Ambani rewired India’s telecom trade, his mango enterprise might reset the nation’s backward agri-export mannequin. Mexico’s success was no accident—it got here from specialization (Tommy Atkins, Ataulfo varieties), proactive regulation (by way of SENASICA), and provide chain mastery. India’s mango market, FinFloww notes, remains to be caught in an period of small farms, large spoilage, and bureaucratic export hurdles.

And time is working out. International mango demand is booming, projected to hit 65 million metric tons by 2025. Local weather change is reshaping rising circumstances. India, with all its quantity and legacy, dangers being left behind.

If Ambani’s mannequin proves scalable, it would simply flip Jamnagar into floor zero for India’s long-overdue mango revolution.