American fulfills demand for US grown fresh asparagus in Europe and Asia

July 18, 2018: American Airlines has helped growers in Mexico and Peru supply the majority of the early season asparagus for Europe and Asia.  The cargo division of the airline has moved nearly 12 million pounds of fresh asparagus around the world on its widebody aircraft in the first six months of 2018 from a […]

American fulfills demand for US grown fresh asparagus in Europe and Asia
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July 18, 2018: American Airlines has helped growers in Mexico and Peru supply the majority of the early season asparagus for Europe and Asia.

The cargo division of the airline has moved nearly 12 million pounds of fresh asparagus around the world on its widebody aircraft in the first six months of 2018 from a number of key US hubs.

“The majority of what we move is green asparagus, but we do move very small amounts of both the albino and purple varieties,” said Joe Goode, American Airlines Cargo’s managing director, Sales – Western Division. “And because they are all fresh spears, they do require careful specialised handling.”

“In addition to moving significant volumes of asparagus, we also move large volumes of lettuce, radicchio, tomatoes and mangoes into Asia over the same period of time,” added Goode.

Peak demand for fresh spring asparagus in Europe begins in mid-February and lasts until Easter, which is when the US growing season starts. One of the largest markets for US-grown asparagus is Asia. This spring, American carried multiple shipments of the vegetable on a daily basis between Los Angeles (LAX) and Tokyo (NRT). To put it in perspective, just in 2018 so far, the airline shipped enough asparagus spears to span 8.5 Tour de France routes (one of which is a collective 2,200 miles) when lined up end-to-end, or enough to fill nearly 240 space shuttles.

The airline maintains the integrity of perishables with help of perishables cooler that American Airlines operates at LAX. The airline also has similar facilities at Dallas-Fort Worth (DFW), Miami (MIA), London Heathrow (LHR), among other key perishable hubs.

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