UPDATE: 3/5/14 Chipotle spokesman walks back the claim, see below.
Chipotle warns global warming may force it to stop serving guacamole.
Yes, that’s an actual headline. Too bad they didn’t do a little research first.
This story is from the excitable kids at Climate Progress, who are paid to make you worry about these things:
The guacamole operation at Chipotle is massive. The company uses, on average, 97,000 pounds of avocado every day to make its guac — which adds up to 35.4 million pounds of avocados every year. And while the avocado industry is fine at the moment, scientists are anticipating drier conditions due to climate change, which may have negative effects on California’s crop. Scientists from the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, for example, predict hotter temps will cause a 40 percent drop in California’s avocado production over the next 32 years. [Climate Progress]
No comment so far from Taco Bell, Chevy’s Fresh Mex, Del Taco, El Toro and many other Mexican food restaurant chains in the USA. (Added: for our overseas readers, this is Chipotle, apparently the news about the Guacamole crisis wasn’t important enough for their press feed)
But if the crisis worsens, expect Guacamole smugglers to fill in the vacuum.
Oh, wait, most avocados don’t come from California:
Mexico accounts for half of world trade
Nearly half of all internationally traded avocados are from Mexico (table 2). It came to nearly 500,000 tonnes valued at 0.9 billion dollars in 2012. Export increases every year, but the increase from 2010 to 2011 was very substantial. Three quarters of Mexican export is directed at their northern neighbour, the USA. Last year, 370,000 tonnes of Mexican produce went across their northern border. Japan bought a lot more Mexican avocados last year than previously: 50,000 tonnes. Canada is their third largest customer. Mexico exports about 30% of its production (table 3).
Number two producer Chile brings 30% of its production to the international trade, with the USA as their most important customer as well, and the Netherlands as number two on that list (table 4). Peru exports 40% of its production, most of it to Europe, with the Netherlands as their most important customer, followed by Spain. 2012 showed growth again, after export remained stable in the years leading up (table 5). Israel is a relatively small producer, but almost the entire harvest (90%) is sold abroad. After a big drop in export in 2011, 2012 saw an increase in export, namely 60,000 tonnes. France, the Netherlands and Russia are important customers (table 8). The Dutch (re)export is mainly aimed at Germany, but Sweden also buys a lot. France, Denmark and Norway are also important customers for the Dutch trade (table 6a).

USA biggest importer, Netherlands second
The United States are by far the biggest avocado importers. The 500,000 tonnes mark was passed in 2012. The majority comes from neighbouring Mexico (table 14). The Netherlands are the world’s second largest import market. Import statistics show that it came to 96,000 tonnes valued at 190 million dollars in 2012. South Africa, Chile and Peru each supplied just under 20,000 tonnes last year. The South African import shows quite a few fluctuations from year to year. Chile and Peru provide more each year (table 15a). According to South African and Peruvian export statistics more is shipped to the Netherlands than (Dutch) import statistics show. This is partially explained by trade going to the Netherlands through other countries, such as France, Spain and Germany. As an importer, France is almost as important as the Netherlands. This country imported 95,000 tonnes in 2012. Spain is their most important supplier, followed by Peru and Israel (table 15b).

Source: http://www.freshplaza.com/article/110214/Avocado-market-still-growing,-Holland-plays-big-role-in-it
h/t to Tom Nelson for the CP link and Steve Milloy for the fun title.
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BOTTOM LINE:
1. This is mostly a marketing ploy by Chipotle i.e. “come get now what you may not be able to get later”.
2. If it ever comes to pass that Chipotle can’t get “locally sourced produce” (I wonder how they get Avocados at the Chipotle in Portland, Maine?) they’ll opt to have them imported in order to keep customers coming in. Profit rules those decisions.
3. added 3/5/14 Told ya so:
Chipotle stirred up the media and guacamole lovers with news that it could “suspend” guacamole from its menu due to global warming.
But a restaurant spokesman tells the Los Angeles Times: “This is way overblown.”

![avocado1[1]](http://wattsupwiththat.files.wordpress.com/2014/03/avocado11.gif?resize=460%2C271)
FWIW – I had an avocado orchard in San Diego County until about 8 years ago. What killed avocado production in Southern California? Mexican avocados were allowed in the country (they weren’t for a very long time despite NAFTA – the excuse was pest control, which wasn’t really the case) and water. Water in California used to be cheap but, with more and more people, the price goes up for farmers and they move on to other crops.
It has nothing to due with climate change – avocados are a rare find in SD County without an irrigation system (although I have a cluster of 7 trees that thrive on a natural spring that waters them year round).
How about the Netherlands gobbling up 11.4 pounds of avocado per capita??? I’m taking my sombrero if I ever go…
Stark Dickflüssig says at 7:02 pm
So, McDonalds won’t be able to get avocadoes? Yeah, sure.
Wait, does McDonalds use avocados in anything? Its true that I haven’t been there that much lately, and when I do go, I usually just get Big Macs. Well, and for the most bang for your buck, a super sized fries. And a ss soda. And an apple pies. Plus, à la mode (the ice cream cone). But I didn’t notice any avocado tofu burger, or I might have just gone with that, with some flax milk. Maybe McDonalds will join that list of companies like Exxon (and Shill) declaring climate change to be real, and eliminate beef from their menu. Right. Then they’d have about 7 customers worldwide.
It’s worse that we thought! How can the world survive without guacamole?
Hey! I’ll be able to make a fortune smuggling Australian avocados into California.
What is about AGW true believers/hustlers and their need to act like Wiley Coyote, coming back to the same dumb stuff over and over again, no matter how obviously stupid and incorrect?
Greens I like (avacado, salad, money) 🙂
Seems to me warmer weather means more avocados, pineapples, oranges etc.
Just sayin’
RoHa says:
March 4, 2014 at 8:01 pm”
In New Zealand a few years ago freight trucks carrying avacados to supermarket were hijacked bacause of bad weather affecting growers and suppliers. For a short time, they were more expensive than bottles of booze and cigarettes. Go figure!
This attempt to shore up the Hispanic vote for AGW with this study seems to be in danger of losing the rational vote.
Which shows a lack of marketing expertise by the alarmists.
The Ven diagram of the Guacamolevore population has just as large an overlap as for any other group with the rational vote.
And as long as proper gravy, black puddings and sausages are in good supply I’m sure the world will survive.
RoHa says:
March 4, 2014 at 8:01 pm
It’s worse that we thought! How can the world survive without guacamole?
Hey! I’ll be able to make a fortune smuggling Australian avocados into California.
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Swapping your budgie smugglers for avocado smugglers, I presume?
Haggis update…record winter snow in Scotland caused by climate change has led to much longer hibernation terms for the poor wee haggis….resultant shortages are leading to panic buying up there.
James the Elder says:
March 4, 2014 at 3:00 pm
How long before: 5% of the world’s population consumes 47% of the guacamole? We must attain guacamole independence.
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Obama needs to consider liberating Mexico to protect the guacamole companies in the US. This could be the defining moment of his presidency!
@goldminor – they use to be called “Banana Republics”, but due to the popularity of Guacamole, now they are Avocado Republics?
Avocado theft is a big deal, especially when the case price jumps up to 60+ dollars during the off season.
The Netherlands is not the most important customer of either Peru or Chile, Northern Europe is.
The fact that the Netherlands appears on the papers is because the stuff is shipped through Rotterdam, one of the biggest ports in that part of the world.
I love avocados, with prawns, a nice sauce and white wine.
@Ed Zuiderwijk – Avocados with Prawns? Interesting combination. Do you have a recipe?
As people who comment here probably know, bread in the US is not the bread that was available 60 years ago. Two things happened. High Fructose Corn Syrup was invented in 1966, which is used in your bread. http://www.the-healthy-diet-paradise.com/HFCS.html
Wheat is not the wheat it was. There are wheat bellies everywhere. http://www.mindbodygreen.com/0-9484/why-wheat-is-ruining-your-life-the-author-of-wheat-belly-explains.html
Therefore, spread avocado mulch on chickpea pancakes, waffles, bread etc & eat yourselves slimmer. Simples. http://www.bbc.co.uk/food/recipes/chickpeaflourpancake_5094
http://www.thewannabechef.net/2012/05/15/chickpea-flour-pancakes/
Incidentally, the fact that flatulence is reduced by switching to chickpeas is a blessing to Gaia, (whoever she is).
At (wait for it) ease,
Perry
Chipotle is the McDonalds of burritos.
“Scientists from the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, for example, predict hotter temps will cause a 40 percent drop in California’s avocado production over the next 32 years.”
Of course that is not going to happen, and even if it DID happen, it would still not be a problem. Why? Because if the Earth warmed so much that California’s avocado crop dropped by 40%, that means that the Nebraska crop would increase by a near infinite percentage.
At least the warmist morons a getting a little smarter. Predictions far enough in the future they won’t have to defend when the fail.
More deliberate lying. Management knows that if they don’t sell the guacamole someone else will. California knows that if they don’t GROW the avocados someone else will. Free markets always find a way to provide what the public wants. If Chipotle doesn’t want to sell you Guacamole then go to Taco Bell.
Do we have any paleo-Guacamole studies?
Despite ongoing attempts, there is no proxy for that.
Isn’t it already warmer than California in most of the places avocados are grown?
This is another sign that the AGW BS campaign has shifted to food security warnings.
Avocado theft is a big deal, especially when the case price jumps up to 60+ dollars during the off season.
Swap you for five manhole covers.
I don’t like avocados nor guacamole, but I love this song, from The Texas Tornados:
/Mr Lynn
re: M Courtney says March 5, 2014 at 12:46 am
…The Ven diagram …
“Venn”; conceived around 1880 by John Venn (no kidding!)
.