However, on account of the imports that have pushed down apple prices across India, farmers in Kashmir have not only switched to high-density varieties of apple, which give fruit within two to three years, but have also turned to mechanised packaging to lower production costs. At a grading facility in the Tiken area of Pulwama, apples rolled over large steel machines, getting washed and dried on the packaging line and sorted into different sizes. Ghulam Nabi Mir, who set up the grading facility, said US imports cut prices by 20 per cent. His mechanised unit charges Rs 100 per pack, cheaper than manual packaging. “We are not importing anything which cannot be produced here. If Kashmiri apples are better in quality than the US apples, why are we importing them?” asked Ghulam Nabi, as he shifted his eyes to a truck parked in the compound being loaded with fruit taken out from his grading facility.