CN Tomatoes: China’s Role

Interesting. Happily, few Chinese tomato products make it here.

Tomatoes: China’s Role​

December 15, 2021- Produce Blueprints
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Blueprints Edition Date: November 2021
BP-tomato.png


China is not only the largest producer of tomatoes worldwide, but it is also the top exporter of tomato paste, accounting for 40 percent of global trade.

Russia is China’s largest tomato trading partner; the United States represents a slim slice of the export pie accounting for only about $10 million in tomato products in 2020.

About 70 percent of China’s total tomato output comes from the remote Xijiang Uygur region in the northwestern corner of the country, where the Silk Road once connected East and West.

In January of this year, the United States announced a withhold release order on the entry of tomatoes, tomato seeds, canned tomatoes, and tomato sauce from China’s Xinjiang region. The order was designed to bring pressure on China over alleged ill-treatment and forced labor of an ethnic minority, Uighur Muslims.

The order includes products manufactured in other countries using tomatoes from Xinjiang. Importers must provide evidence shipments were not produced with forced labor to be released.

In 2020 the regional concentration of production led to logistical problems when the coronavirus pandemic hit.

As a result, the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs in China issued new guidelines to promote protected agriculture with a goal of having more than 2 million hectares of greenhouse facilities by 2025.

Currently, about 35 percent of vegetables in China are grown in greenhouses, with new high-tech structures being built around cities to bring produce closer to consumers.



https://archive.ph/rT4K0 (Something's wrong with this.)
 
I have literally never eaten a tomato I didn't grow myself or know that a friend or neighbor has grown. I refuse to. If only because tomatoes you get in a store have almost no flavor at all. Why waste my time if the thing is going to taste like tomato water? I'll just not get it. We had a blight last year that ruined all the tomatoes around so there were no tomatoes. But you know what? It made the tomatoes taste that much better this year.

The same general concept applies to most other fruits and vegetables that I can grow myself, though I am not as strict about them. Specifically with tomatoes and the Jews I am a Nazi.
 
I have literally never eaten a tomato I didn't grow myself or know that a friend or neighbor has grown. I refuse to. If only because tomatoes you get in a store have almost no flavor at all. Why waste my time if the thing is going to taste like tomato water? I'll just not get it. We had a blight last year that ruined all the tomatoes around so there were no tomatoes. But you know what? It made the tomatoes taste that much better this year.

The same general concept applies to most other fruits and vegetables that I can grow myself, though I am not as strict about them. Specifically with tomatoes and the Jews I am a Nazi.

What I don't understand is that it is braindead easy to grow tomatoes. My wife starts them in the spring, and usually by midsummer, we are overloaded with tomatoes that we can't even give away.

There's no better pizza sauce made than from Marzanos grown from your own garden.
 
  • Agree
Reactions: Dammit Mandrake!
What I don't understand is that it is braindead easy to grow tomatoes. My wife starts them in the spring, and usually by midsummer, we are overloaded with tomatoes that we can't even give away.

There's no better pizza sauce made than from Marzanos grown from your own garden.
Not every place is the best to grow tomatoes. Where I live, many different types of vegetables are grown outside. But if you want tomatoes you usually need to put them under some sort of covering to get the temperature hot enough for them to grow well.
 
  • Agree
Reactions: Dammit Mandrake!
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