Xinhua
02 May 2026, 00:45 GMT+10
by Mahmoud Fouly
BEHEIRA, Egypt, May 1 (Xinhua) -- Inside a sprawling packing plant at the edge of Egypt's citrus country, workers in white coats and hairnets moved briskly along conveyor belts, stacking cartons of Valencia oranges as the fruit passed through sorting machines, quality checks, and final inspection before being sealed for shipment abroad.
The facility is run by Magrabi Agriculture, known as MAFA, one of the larger players in Egypt's export citrus industry. Its compound, with orchards, warehouses, and production lines carved from reclaimed desert, has the feel of a small agricultural city, governed by the rhythms of harvest and demand.
Now, a new market force is reshaping those rhythms.
On Friday, China expanded its zero-tariff policy to cover all 53 African nations that maintain diplomatic ties with Beijing, a framework that will run through April 2028. The move brings 20 additional African countries, including Egypt, into a preferential trade arrangement that their competitors elsewhere do not enjoy.
For Egyptian citrus exporters, the timing is propitious.
"This decision will certainly help Egyptian exports become more competitive inside the Chinese market," said Ibrahim El-Banna, MAFA's export manager.
Egypt is the world's largest citrus exporter, with the volume reaching around 2 million tonnes. But access to China, even duty-free, is not simply a matter of supply meeting demand.
Exporters must satisfy Chinese phytosanitary regulations, obtain official accreditation for farms and packing facilities, and subject their fruit to cold treatment during transit, keeping the internal pulp temperature below 1.6 degrees Celsius for 16 to 18 consecutive days, a safeguard against fruit fly contamination. The requirements, El-Banna noted, function as a de facto quality filter.
"Those with higher quality and stronger capabilities will be able to achieve the required gains and the required connection with the Chinese market," said Ahmed Fikry, a citrus packhouse assistant manager at MAFA, who described China's tariff policy as evidence of deepening cooperation between Beijing and African governments.
MAFA's packing plants process between 70,000 and 90,000 tonnes of raw citrus each year. About 70 percent is exported, and the facilities employ nearly 1,000 workers. China already receives MAFA oranges, along with smaller volumes of lemons, grapefruit, and mandarins.
For the company's managers, the value of the Chinese market lies only partly in its scale. The discipline it demands in packaging, cold chain logistics, and regulatory compliance has pushed Egyptian producers to raise their standards across the board.
On the packing floor, the work continued without fanfare: cartons loaded, pallets built, trucks waiting in the lot outside. The oranges, grown in reclaimed desert and bound for tables thousands of miles away, moved steadily toward the door.
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by Mahmoud Fouly BEHEIRA, Egypt, May 1 (Xinhua) -- Inside a sprawling packing plant at the edge of Egypt's citrus country, workers...
(260501) -- BEHEIRA, May 1, 2026 (Xinhua) -- People work in a citrus packing plant of Magrabi Agriculture in Beheira province, Egypt,...
