Have passed this question around the world without an answer. As I understand, most if not all sea shipments of agricultural products such as rice, corn, and cacao must be fumigated (usally with methyl bromide) before shipping. I would like to know, under what circumstances (type of container used, or via air transport, etc.) are beans shipped and guaranteed not fumigated?-since any fumigated beans would no longer be "organic". It seems that fumigation is a very standard operating procedure performed not once, but sometimes 2x, on cocoa beans. So how do "organic" beans arrive stateside or to other cocoa processing countries?
I have also heard that some companies buy organic liquor in the country of origin, and have it shipped, since liquor does not require fumigation.
Tags: beans, fumigation, organic, shipping
Permalink Reply by Nancy Nadel on March 28, 2011 at 5:00pm
Permalink Reply by Richard Falotico on April 24, 2011 at 9:43am Jeff and Nancy,
A couple points:
Generally, if your paperwork is done correctly stating organic status, most origins will not be fumigated. That being said, these are the biggest exceptions:
Indonesia as an origin is automatically fumigated upon arrival to the US
Venezuela has mandatory fumigating before export but not upon US arrival
As Jeff notes, semi-finished products are not subject to fumigation.
Hope this helps!
Permalink Reply by Jeff Stern on April 24, 2011 at 10:10am Thanks! You're the first person to provide any kind of answer to this question.
Permalink Reply by Ice Blocks! on April 25, 2011 at 9:18pm
Permalink Reply by Jeff Stern on April 26, 2011 at 12:49pm
Permalink Reply by Duffy Sheardown on April 26, 2011 at 12:35pm Check out a pos last year from Jim Lucas who discussed what controls his beans have to go through to get from Brazil to the USA - and about the precautions you have to take when using the very nasty chemicals involved.
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