Las Vegas Review-Journal

Cranberry overload can lead to composting

- By Jeff Wilson Bloomberg News

Cranberrie­s might be a staple on Thanksgivi­ng tables, but a glut of U.S. supplies has gotten so large that fruit could be headed to the compost pile.

Just as demand is hitting its seasonal peak, American processors are eagerly awaiting government approval that would allow them to turn excess fruit into fertilizer. The program would be the first of its kind for cranberrie­s.

Supplies have piled up amid bountiful U.S. harvests and a surge in imports. Inventorie­s were large enough to top consumptio­n before farmers even started gathering this year’s crop in September. The overhang prompted growers and processors to vote in favor of the disposal program at a biannual meeting of the Cranberry Marketing Committee in August. The U.S. Department of Agricultur­e could rubber-stamp the proposal as early as this week. CRANBERRIE­S

“The order will allow the industry to get back into supply and demand balance,” said Kellyanne Dignan, the director of global cooperativ­e communicat­ions at Ocean Spray Cranberrie­s Inc., the largest U.S. producer and processor, and a name that’s become almost synonymous with the fruit.

The humble cranberry is very familiar this time of year as it pops up in everything from traditiona­l relishes to Christmas cookies and cocktails. About 20 percent of annual sales of the fresh and processed fruit occurs during the week of Thanksgivi­ng. But becoming a celebrity

of the fruit world hasn’t been enough to reverse the slowing pace of demand growth, leading the industry to take desperate measures to keep prices from collapsing.

Under the proposed initiative, fruit processors and exporters would be responsibl­e for supply disposal. Some can be donated or used for research, but the lion’s share will likely end up as compost. The cranberry committee has also recommende­d that growers reduce next year’s production, leaving it 25 percent below average sales of the past six years, according to Michelle Hogan, executive director of the Wareham, Massachuse­tts-based group. The plan for next season is similar to a crop-reduction method last used in 2000 and 2001.

“We are producing a lot more than we are selling,” Hogan said.

Even as U.S. exports climbed in recent years, with shipments to China helping boost American shipments by 33 percent over the past five seasons, that hasn’t been enough to prevent a jump in inventorie­s. The problem is U.S. production grew 19 percent since 2011 and imports, mostly from Canada, tripled.

The disposal program would help reverse the growth of excess supply while the industry works to increase demand in domestic and internatio­nal markets, said Tom Lochner, executive director of the Wisconsin State Cranberry Growers Associatio­n. About 5 percent of the crop is sold as fresh fruit, with the

rest stored and sold frozen, dried or processed into juices and sauces.

If the USDA approves the program, any handler that uses more than 125,000 barrels would be required to dispose of 15 percent of their supplies gathered from this year’s crop, Hogan of the Cranberry Marketing Committee said. A barrel weighs 100 pounds.

A bout of bad weather could also help to ease the fruit glut. American production is projected to fall 6 percent this year to 5.6 million barrels after some adverse growing conditions, the government estimates.

Cranberrie­s are native to North America with about 75 percent of global production grown in the U.S. Wisconsin accounts for more than half the domestic harvest.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States