Pandol Bros. to close office in Chile
Pandol Bros. to close office in Chile
An office maintained in Santiago, Chile, by Delano, CA-based Pandol Bros. Inc. since 1987 will permanently close at the end of April, Anthony Stetson, Pandol's vice president of sales, told The Produce News April 16.
Mr. Stetson said that the change will not affect the company's Chilean volume in years to come. "We will work directly with exporters out of our office here [in Delano]," he said. Servicios Agricola Pandol Bros. Ltd. in Chile "was an inspection service and information service for us. With the communications we have these days, it's as easy to work direct" from California.
Closing the office also "saves money," said Mr. Stetson. "That is the real reason. With the way the season has gone and with the exchange rates, it is not economically feasible any more" to keep the Chile office open.
Bill Lewis, who has headed Servicios Agricola Pandol Bros., will leave the company when the office closes at the end of April.
Mr. Stetson said that the Chilean grape grower-exporter Agro-Frio, which is owned by Pandol Bros. and supplies about a quarter of Pandol's Chilean business, will continue normal operations with or without a Chile office.
Pandol Bros. will import about 2 million cartons of Chilean fruit this year. Most of that volume will be grapes.
Mr. Stetson said that Pandol receives about 20-30 percent of its volume in the last two or three weeks of the Chilean season. Although the U.S. Department of Agriculture marketing order ended the Chilean season for some grape varieties after April 20, Pandol will be marketing Crimsons into the third week of May. Thompson seedless grapes out of storage will be sold by Pandol Bros. until the end of April. The company will also be marketing Red Globes in May. He added that these plans fit well with Pandol's Mexican grape program, which begins with Perlettes around May 10-12.
Pandol Bros. first became involved in the Chilean fruit deal in the 1970s.
Mr. Stetson said that the change will not affect the company's Chilean volume in years to come. "We will work directly with exporters out of our office here [in Delano]," he said. Servicios Agricola Pandol Bros. Ltd. in Chile "was an inspection service and information service for us. With the communications we have these days, it's as easy to work direct" from California.
Closing the office also "saves money," said Mr. Stetson. "That is the real reason. With the way the season has gone and with the exchange rates, it is not economically feasible any more" to keep the Chile office open.
Bill Lewis, who has headed Servicios Agricola Pandol Bros., will leave the company when the office closes at the end of April.
Mr. Stetson said that the Chilean grape grower-exporter Agro-Frio, which is owned by Pandol Bros. and supplies about a quarter of Pandol's Chilean business, will continue normal operations with or without a Chile office.
Pandol Bros. will import about 2 million cartons of Chilean fruit this year. Most of that volume will be grapes.
Mr. Stetson said that Pandol receives about 20-30 percent of its volume in the last two or three weeks of the Chilean season. Although the U.S. Department of Agriculture marketing order ended the Chilean season for some grape varieties after April 20, Pandol will be marketing Crimsons into the third week of May. Thompson seedless grapes out of storage will be sold by Pandol Bros. until the end of April. The company will also be marketing Red Globes in May. He added that these plans fit well with Pandol's Mexican grape program, which begins with Perlettes around May 10-12.
Pandol Bros. first became involved in the Chilean fruit deal in the 1970s.