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Home»Specialized Insurance»India’s Prized Alphonso Mango Crop Ruined by Weather
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India’s Prized Alphonso Mango Crop Ruined by Weather

AwaisBy AwaisMay 27, 2026No Comments3 Mins Read0 Views
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In India’s western state of Maharashtra, mango farmer Komal Walke is scrambling to meet orders from India’s online grocers after her family’s three acres of orchards produced almost no Alphonso mangoes this year.

Walke, a 26-year-old horticulturist in the coastal town of Devgad, has been forced to source fruit from larger farms to keep her father’s business afloat.

“If we don’t deliver on our orders, the big clients will not return next year,” she said.

India is the world’s largest grower of mangoes and produced 28 million metric tons of the fruit in 2024 to 2025, data from research and rating agency CRISIL showed.

Maharashtra is renowned for its Alphonso mangoes, but officials say hotter weather has ruined this year’s crop of the variety known as the “King of Mangoes.”

A sharp difference in day and nighttime temperatures in December and January hurt flowering and fruit setting, while hotter than usual weather in April and May, probably due to the El Niño weather phenomenon, then spoiled the fruits themselves, said Bapusaheb Manikrao Lambade, a government agriculture officer in Devgad, one of Maharashtra’s top Alphonso-growing areas.

El Niño is a climate pattern that alters global weather and can trigger extreme conditions. A strong El Niño is expected this year and forecast to have an adverse effect on crops across Asia, South America and Africa.

A government-backed survey by scientists and field officials earlier this year, a copy of which was reviewed by Reuters, estimates this year’s crop losses in Devgad at 85% to 90%. The weather has also caused losses in mango-growing areas elsewhere in the state.

India’s entire mango crop was worth $2.3 billion last year, according to Indian research firm Mordor Intelligence, which expects the market to grow to $3.4 billion by 2031.

While much of the fruit stays in India – mangoes are popular during the blistering summer heat – about $56 million worth of mangoes and $80 million worth of mango pulp were exported in 2025.

Reuters spoke to more than a dozen farmers in Maharashtra, as well as traders, businesses, exporters and government officials, who said losses had been severe and production among the lowest in decades.

War Hurts Mango Trade

The weather damage has coincided with a slump in exports as a result of the Iran war.

India is one of the world’s largest exporters of mangoes, competing with countries including Mexico, Thailand and Vietnam.

The United Arab Emirates, the U.S., UK, Kuwait, and Qatar are among the biggest importers of Indian fresh mangoes.

Shridhar Pathak, co-founder of mango exporter Shreevali Agro, said freight charges had more than doubled, and delays or cancellations to consignments for the Gulf including Dubai and Oman have cut his shipments by nearly 40% this year.

Mangoes originally earmarked for export have been sent to local markets instead, driving prices down despite the El Niño-linked shortages, he said.

The disruption has rippled across the supply chain, also hurting businesses linked to the seasonal mango trade.

Sanjay Nare, a 52-year-old manufacturer of mango cartons in Malvan, said he had unsold inventory of nearly 100,000 boxes in his factory this year. The coastal town is about 50 km (32 miles) from Devgad.

“The economy in this region is sustained by mangoes and fishes,” Nare said. “Without our seasonal mangoes (in summer), we have very little else.”($1 = 96.4450 Indian rupees)

(Reporting by Ashwin Manikandan; editing by Ira Dugal and Kate Mayberry)

Alphonso Crop Indias Mango Prized Ruined Weather
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