The EU informed India in March that shipments of premium Alphonso mangoes would be blocked from May until December 2015 after authorities in Brussels found consignments infested with fruit flies.
“Since we got to know about the issue in March, we’ve put in place an elaborate examination and certification procedure that addresses the issue raised by the EU,” said Ajay Sahai, director general of the Federation of Indian Export Organisations (FIEO), a body affiliated with the trade ministry.
Besides mangoes, four vegetables, aubergine, the taro plant, bitter gourd and snake gourd, were also banned, according to PTI.
India exports 16 million mangoes every year to the UK, its largest market for vegetables in the EU.
The FIEO and the trade ministry have asked Brussels to lift the ban, Sahai said.
Although Europe is not a major market for Indian mangoes, any ban typically weighs on prices, hitting farmers’ incomes.
Local prices have fallen about 15 percent in the past few days, said Sahai.
The Middle East buys 80 percent of mango exports from India, the world’s biggest producer of the fruit, accounting for about half of global output.
Other major producers include China, Thailand, Mexico, Pakistan, the Philippines, Indonesia, Brazil, Nigeria and Egypt.
Asia, excluding India, accounts for more than a third of world mango output.