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Mango Pulp Supplier & Exporter for Canada

HACCP-certified Chaunsa and Sindhri pulp from our Multan processing facility, shipped FOB Karachi to Vancouver, Montreal or Halifax.

Canada's food and beverage manufacturing sector maintains year-round demand for tropical fruit ingredients that cannot be sourced domestically at commercial scale. Mango pulp is a key input for juice blends, nectars, yogurt, smoothies and bakery fillings consumed across the country. Pakistan's Chaunsa and Sindhri varieties are recognised by Canadian importers for high Brix, natural sweetness and colour stability — qualities that reduce the need for added sugar or colouring in finished products.

Why Canada buyers source mango pulp from Pakistan

  • Chaunsa and Sindhri are among the world's highest-Brix mango varieties, delivering naturally sweet pulp that lowers recipe cost for juice and dairy manufacturers.
  • Pakistan's harvest window (May–August), packed in aseptic format with a 12–18 month shelf life, gives Canadian buyers year-round supply security.
  • FOB Karachi pricing is competitive against alternative origins such as India, Mexico or Brazil once freight to West and East Coast Canadian ports is accounted for.
  • Established trade ties and direct liner services between Karachi and Canadian ports mean predictable lead times and fewer transhipment risks.

Importing mango pulp into Canada

All food imported into Canada falls under the Safe Food for Canadians Act and its Safe Food for Canadians Regulations (SFCR), administered by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA). The Canadian importer — not the exporter — must hold a valid Safe Food for Canadians (SFC) licence before the shipment arrives at the border; a licence cannot be obtained at the point of entry. The importer also maintains a written Preventive Control Plan documenting their food-safety controls for the commodity, and the SFC licence number must appear on the import declaration to the Canada Border Services Agency. Mango pulp typically falls within HS heading 2008 or 2007 depending on preparation and added sugar; the importer's customs broker should confirm the exact tariff classification. MMA Farms provides the documentation package — phytosanitary certificate, certificate of analysis, bill of lading, commercial invoice and packing list — that the Canadian importer needs to satisfy CFIA and the CBSA at entry.

Certifications & documentation

MMA Farms operates under HACCP and a GFSI-benchmarked food-safety management system — the baseline assurance Canadian food-safety auditors and retail customers typically require. Every consignment ships with a certificate of analysis (Brix, pH, moisture, microbial counts, pesticide residue results); a phytosanitary certificate from Pakistan's Plant Protection Department; a certificate of origin from the relevant chamber of commerce; and a full traceability record to the growing region and processing batch. Canadian importers requiring additional third-party audit reports or specific label-compliance documents — ingredient declarations in English and French per SFCR — should raise these at quotation stage so MMA Farms can coordinate accordingly.

Shipping from Karachi to Canada

MMA Farms quotes FOB Karachi as standard; CFR or CIF to a named Canadian port is available on request. The main Canadian gateway ports are Vancouver on the West Coast, and Montreal or Halifax on the East Coast. West Coast routing is generally fastest to Vancouver, with total transit roughly 28–38 days. East Coast routing via the Suez Canal to Montreal runs approximately 30–40 days and is preferred by central and eastern Canadian manufacturers; Halifax offers a further option for Atlantic Canada and inland-by-rail buyers. Reefer containers are available for frozen pulp; aseptic bag-in-drum ships in standard dry containers. MMA Farms works with licensed Karachi freight forwarders and can help buyers connect with Canadian customs brokers experienced in food-grade imports from South Asia.

Pulp formats we ship to Canada

Aseptic mango pulp in bag-in-steel-drum is the preferred format for Canadian juice and beverage co-manufacturers needing ambient storage and long shelf life. Frozen pulp in block form suits dairy processors — yogurt, sorbet and smoothie manufacturers — with cold-chain infrastructure. Canned mango pulp in retail or foodservice sizes serves distributors supplying the South Asian grocery channel, a significant segment in Toronto, Vancouver and Calgary. Mango concentrate suits buyers minimising freight cost per unit of dissolved solids.

Mango pulp import FAQ — Canada

Does MMA Farms' pulp meet CFIA requirements for import into Canada?

MMA Farms supplies the documentation package — CoA, phytosanitary certificate, certificate of origin and traceability records — that the Canadian importer needs to satisfy CFIA. The importer holds the SFC licence and Preventive Control Plan obligation under SFCR; our HACCP and GFSI-benchmarked certification supports the importer's due-diligence records.

What is the minimum order quantity for a shipment to Canada?

A standard 20-ft dry container holds roughly 80 drums of aseptic pulp. We can discuss consolidated loads for buyers testing a new product line, though full container loads are the most cost-effective basis for regular procurement.

How are pesticide residue levels documented for Canadian customs?

Each batch is tested against a pesticide residue panel at an accredited laboratory before dispatch. The resulting certificate of analysis ships with every consignment and can be made available to CFIA inspectors on request. Historical CoA data can be shared with prospective buyers at the sampling stage.

Which Canadian ports do you ship to, and how long is transit?

Vancouver is the most common discharge port for Western Canadian buyers, at roughly 28–38 days from Karachi. Montreal suits Ontario and Quebec buyers at approximately 30–40 days via Suez; Halifax is also available. We can help connect buyers with forwarders who regularly run these lanes.

Can labels be adapted for Canada's bilingual English–French requirements?

Bulk industrial formats — bag-in-drum, frozen block — are typically labelled by the Canadian importer or co-packer, who applies consumer-facing labels meeting SFCR bilingual requirements. MMA Farms provides full product specifications and ingredient data to support that process.

Get a mango pulp quotation for Canada

Send your product form, estimated volume, destination port and application — our export desk replies with indicative pricing and next steps, usually within one business day.

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