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Avocado has become one of the world's trendiest foods.
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As the poster child of millennial healthy eating,
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this superfood is now a mainstay for foodies everywhere.
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But have you noticed your avo on toast
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is costing more and more?
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Avocado prices have rocketed in recent years by up to 129%,
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with the average national price of a single Hass avocado
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reaching $2.10 in 2019, almost doubling in just one year.
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So, why are avocados so expensive?
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Archaeologists in Peru have found domesticated avocado seeds
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buried with Incan mummies dating back to 750 BC.
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But it was the Aztecs in 500 BC who named it āhuacatl,
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which translates to "testicle."
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When Spanish conquistadors swept through Mexico
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and Central America in the 16th century,
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they renamed it aguacate.
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The farming of aguacate developed
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over the next few hundred years,
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predominantly in Central America and South America.
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But consumption of the "alligator pear"
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outside of these regions before the late 19th century
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was almost nonexistent.
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The commercialization of aguacate began in the early 1900s
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but was focused on branding avocados as a delicacy
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for the wealthy, like this advert in The New Yorker
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from 1920, which declared them as
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"The aristocrat of salad fruit."
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But a selection of Californian growers realized
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that the hard-to-pronounce aguacate was off-putting
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for the mass market, so they formed
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the California Avocado Association.
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By the 1950s, production scale grew,
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and avocado prices fell to about 25 cents each.
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Popularity increased further with the wave
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of inter-American immigration in the '60s,
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as Latin Americans brought their love of avocados
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with them to the US.
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But as demand increased, supply had to keep up,
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and the true difficulties of yielding large-scale
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avocado crops began to show.
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Avocado orchards require an extraordinary amount
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of costly resources in order to flourish.
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Gus Gunderson: There are multiple inputs
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that avocados require,
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whether it's water, fertilizer, pruning, pest control,
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the sunburn protection of trees.
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All those go into making your chances better
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of having a very good-quality crop.
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When we decide to plant an avocado orchard,
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we'll plant trees that come from certified nurseries.
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We have to place our orders years in advance.
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On average, if we're producing 100,000 pounds per acre,
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that takes about a million gallons of water,
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so 100 gallons per pound,
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so it'd be about 50 gallons per 8-ounce fruit.
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But that's dependent on what mother nature
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will throw at you, you know, we have wind,
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we have intense sun.
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It's really hard for a grower to manage
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the unmanageable things that will affect a crop.
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Narrator: The surge in popularity of avocados
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stalled during the fat-fighting frenzy of the 1980s,
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with an average of only 1 pound per capita
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being consumed in America by 1989.
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The decade's low-fat obsession drove consumers
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away from avocado because of its high fat content,
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without really understanding
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the nutritional truth hidden within.
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Hazel Wallace: When it comes to fat in food in general,
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people tend to get a little bit concerned
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because we often hear in the media
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that fat isn't good for us.
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But the type of fat that's in avocados
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is monounsaturated fat, which is actually often deemed
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healthy fat or heart-healthy fat,
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so while there is a lot of fat in avocados,
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it's actually quite good fat.
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Avocado started its meteoric comeback
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at the turn of the millennium, and it was helped
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by an unlikely political decision.
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In 2005, the US Department of Agriculture
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lifted a 90-year-old ban to allow the importation
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of Mexican avocados to all 50 states.
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Initially, this decision angered Californian growers,
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who feared the move could slash local growers' sales
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by as much as 20%.
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What actually had transpired and took place
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was, as that Mexican supply became much more
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prevalent and available, retailers got behind
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marketing and selling avocados,
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food service providers, restaurants started putting it
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as permanent parts of their menus,
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and demand started to boom
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because the inconsistent supply chains before
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were now consistent, and consumers were allowed
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to enjoy avocados every day of the year.
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Narrator: The biggest day of the avocado calendar
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became Super Bowl Sunday, when it's now estimated
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that almost 200 million pounds of avocados
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are eaten during the big game in America.
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But if you take a moment to consider
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the resources needed to produce that amount,
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you can start to understand avocados' elevated prices.
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According to experts, it takes roughly 270 liters of water
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to grow a pound of avocados.
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So 200 million pounds could require
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as much as 54 billion liters of water,
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which means droughts or heat waves can have
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devastating consequences on the avocado industry.
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In fact, that's exactly what's been happening in California
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for the last seven years, with the Sunshine State
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only recently being declared drought-free in 2019,
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which goes a long way to explaining record avocado prices.
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In some countries, like Chile, avocado cultivation
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is being blamed for exacerbating droughts,
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as lush green orchards overlook dry riverbeds.
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Perhaps the biggest reason for avocados' rise to dominance
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is the emergence of the clean-eating lifestyle.
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No longer just a chip dip for special occasions,
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this superfood can be found in a plethora of recipes
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in cafés and restaurants everywhere around the world.
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And those who are eating them are really keen
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for you to know about it.
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Just type #avocado into Instagram, and you'll be hit
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with over 10 million search results.
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But is the glorification of avocado justified?
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There's quite a big hype around avocados,
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but it actually is quite justified when it comes
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to how nutrient-dense this food is.
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There's not many foods that actually replicate it
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in terms of a nutritional profile.
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When it comes to calling something a superfood,
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I'm not really for that label.
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Avocados are definitely a good food
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to include in your diet, but like I said,
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you're not really missing out if you don't like them
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or if you can't eat them for any reason.
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Monounsaturated fats, we can find that in things
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like olive oil and olive, nuts, and seeds.
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The vitamins and minerals, we can find that
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in other green vegetables, so spinach and broccoli
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and things like that.
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So there's ways of getting those nutrients in
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without having avocado.
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All of this produce requires
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an astonishing amount of labor.
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Even once grown, pruned, and picked,
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avocados need costly distribution methods
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in order to be delivered fresh and ripe
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to far-flung corners of the world.
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If you're living in Philadelphia, right?
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You wanna buy a ripe avocado in Philadelphia?
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What they do is they ship green avocados
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from California to Philadelphia,
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they send them to the ripening center,
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they warm them up and get ethylene in them,
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so they all ripen, and then,
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when they're moved out to the retail stores,
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you're actually buying something
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that's almost ready to eat or ready to eat.
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Cause if you were to buy a green avocado that's shipped
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straight from California to your market,
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you would have to ripen it yourself
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over a seven- to 10-day period,
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and most consumers are a little more anxious
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for their avocado toast than waiting 10 days. [laughs]
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Narrator: With prices so high, the commodity of avocados
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has attracted a spate of thefts from orchards
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and delivery trucks worldwide.
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In New Zealand, armed night patrols and electric fences
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have been introduced after a grower in Northland
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had 70% of his orchard stolen.
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There's even further grim reading for avocado lovers.
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In Michoacán, where 80% of Mexico's avocados originate,
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cartels run a so-called "blood avocado" trade,
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violently enforcing a nonnegotiable extortion fee
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from farmers based on the size of their land
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and the weight of their crop.
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Some restaurants have begun an avocado boycott,
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as we all weigh the ethics behind our eating habits.
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Experts suggest that water shortages
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could affect 5 billion people by 2050,
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and rainfall in the so-called drought belt,
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which includes Mexico and South America,
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is predicted to decline.
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But whilst evidence of environmental degradation
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is mounting, the avocado industry is still growing
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along with consumer demand.
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In certain places, the sustainability of avocado production
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will become untenable.