A USDA report said China’s asparagus production was going to be 210,000 tons in 2010, and 240,000 in 2011. Puette says those numbers are much closer to the truth. He estimates that China’s asparagus production for 2014 was about 292,000 tons. “Even with the lowered production estimates, China is still a major asparagus producer.”
That puts Peru, which historically had no asparagus, at the top of the dirt pile. The US encouraged Peru to grow asparagus rather than cocaine in the 1990s, and it has become the third-most important export for Peru—its primary destination, the United States. China started allowing imports of asparagus from Peru in 2013 because of quality issues with local product, ChinaAg reported. “Fresh asparagus from the US and Peru are perceived within China as being of better quality,” Puette says—a status vegetable, if you will, in the wealthy cities of Shanghai and Hong Kong.
Asparagus is time-intensive to harvest, which gives countries with low labor costs a distinct advantage. China’s Shanxi province has a surplus of cheap farm labor, Puette notes, and much of the fresh product is sold cheap to processors who then export to countries where they can undercut local prices.
Germans, for what it’s worth, still highly value fresh, locally grown asparagus. Simon Schumacher, executive director of the Verband Süddeutscher Spargel- und Erdbeeranbauer e.V. (Southern Germany Association of Asparagus and Strawberry Growers), says the season started 10 days later than last year because of cool temperatures: “Prices were satisfactory. Yields are good. The quality is excellent.”