List of countries by apricot production
This is a list of countries by apricot production in 2012 mostly based on FAOSTAT FAO accessed in 2013. The total world apricot production for 2012 was 4,038,520 tonnes.
>100,000 tonnes
Rank | Country/Region | Apricot production (tonnes) |
---|---|---|
1 | Turkey | 795,768 |
2 | Iran | 460,000 |
3 | Uzbekistan | 365,000 |
4 | Algeria | 269,308 |
5 | Italy | 247,146 |
6 | Pakistan | 192,500 |
7 | France | 189,711 |
8 | Morocco | 122,405 |
9 | Spain | 119,400 |
50,000-100,000 tonne
Rank | Country/Region | Apricot production (tonnes) |
---|---|---|
10 | Egypt | 98,772 |
11 | Greece | 90,200 |
12 | Japan | 90,000 |
13 | Afghanistan | 83,500 |
14 | People's Republic of China | 81,880 |
15 | Syrian Arab Republic | 72,000 |
16 | Ukraine | 62,900 |
17 | Russian Federation | 57,000 |
18 | United States of America | 55,157 |
19 | South Africa | 52,504 |
10,000-50,000 tonnes
Rank | Country/Region | Apricot production (tonnes) |
---|---|---|
20 | Turkmenistan | 36,091 |
21 | Tunisia | 33,500 |
22 | Tajikistan | 30,000 |
23 | Romania | 29,089 |
24 | Libya | 25,500 |
25 | Azerbaijan | 23,952 |
26 | Lebanon | 23,500 |
27 | Iraq | 22,500 |
28 | Kyrgyzstan | 22,000 |
29 | Argentina | 20,000 |
30 | India | 18,000 |
31 | Serbia | 16,599 |
32 | Chile | 16,000 |
33 | Kazakhstan | 15,000 |
34 | Israel | 13,379 |
35 | Australia | 13,000 |
36 | Hungary | 10,779 |
37 | Bulgaria | 10,196 |
<10,000 tonnes
Rank | Country/Region | Apricot production (tonnes) |
---|---|---|
38 | Switzerland | 8,768 |
39 | Austria | 8,550 |
40 | Jordan | 7,992 |
41 | Armenia | 7,618 |
42 | Republic of Moldova | 5,162 |
43 | Republic of Macedonia | 4,503 |
44 | Albania | 4,300 |
45 | Poland | 3,428 |
46 | Portugal | 3,200 |
47 | New Zealand | 3,000 |
48 | Yemen | 2,150 |
49 | Nepal | 1,484 |
50 | Madagascar | 1,400 |
External links
- FAO complete list
- Fresh apricots, production by country (sourced from the USDA)
- World Largest Producers Countries of Apricots
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/13/2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.