Porterville Recorder

Citrus research board report explains cost impacts on growers

- THE RECORDER recorder@portervill­erecorder.com

New regulation­s are expected to cost California citrus growers an average of $701 per acre per year, or $203 million annually statewide, according to a new study commission­ed by the Citrus Research Board (CRB).

“Compliance with environmen­tal regulation­s not associated with groundwate­r sustainabi­lity is estimated to increase costs by $17.7 million, or $67 per acre of citrus,” predicts Bruce A. Babcock, PH.D., a professor in the School of Public Policy at the University of California, Riverside, who authored the study. “New labor requiremen­ts will increase costs by $112 million, or $357 per acre, once they are all phased in.”

“Babcock, has presented a well-researched economic report that shows how new regulation­s will increasing­ly impact California’s citrus industry,” said CRB President Gary Schulz.

The report, Impact of Regulation­s on Production Costs and Competitiv­eness of the California Citrus Industry, also predicts that controllin­g the Asian citrus psyllid (ACP) “will increase costs by $65 million, or $248 per acre per year, if controls are extended to all citrus-growing regions.” Compliance training costs are estimated to increase costs by another $29 per acre, or $7.5 million for the state citrus industry.

“As I read and reread Dr. Babcock’s report, two things kept jumping off the page: one, ‘Cost increases borne by California’s citrus but not by… other citrus growing regions decrease the future competitiv­eness of California’s citrus industry’; and two, ‘… future compliance with these regulation­s is estimated to increase costs by $203 million, or $701 per acre per year,’” said California Citrus Mutual President Joel Nelsen. “When the cost of citrus at store level gets too expensive, consumers look for lower priced fruit. This UCR report paints a clear path for policy makers if their goal is to drive the citrus industry out of California and onto off-shore production areas.”

The 20-page report includes a breakdown of increases in labor costs, including California’s minimum hourly wage increases, which are scheduled to rise in annual increments to $15 over the next four years. The report also covers the projected cost increases of recent state legislatio­n dealing with paid sick leave, payment rates for rest and recovery periods, overtime and workers compensati­on.

The section on insecticid­e treatment addresses grower cost of spraying for ACP, even though the severity of the problem currently differs greatly in various areas of the state. If ACP establishe­s itself in all citrus regions in the state, which the report says is “almost inevitable,” control efforts would amount to $39.5 million per year, according to Babcock. This would be in addition to the state-mandated tarping of fruit that is transporte­d to packinghou­ses, at a cost of approximat­ely $9 million per year.

According to the report, The Food Safety Modernizat­ion Act, which was passed in 2011 and is still being implemente­d, will not require major changes

for growers who are already Gfsi-certified (Global Food Safety Initiative compliant).

The impact of the Sustainabl­e Groundwate­r Management Act (SGMA) is hard to predict, according to Babcock. “It will not be possible to calculate the impact of SGMA until each basin's groundwate­r sustainabi­lity plans have been finalized,” he states. “Without new surface water supplies,

it seems inevitable that some farmland that currently relies on groundwate­r will need to be fallowed to balance withdrawal­s with recharge rates.”

Babcock, a Fellow of the Agricultur­al and Applied Economics Associatio­n, has won numerous awards for his applied policy research. He received a PH.D. in Agricultur­al and Resource Economics from the University of California, Berkeley, and Master's and Bachelor's degrees from the University of California, Davis.

The CRB administer­s the California Citrus Research Program, the grower-funded and grower-directed program establishe­d in 1968 under the California Marketing Act, as the mechanism enabling the state's citrus producers to sponsor and support needed research. The full report on the Impact of Regulation­s on Production Costs and Competitiv­eness of the California Citrus Industry, as well as more informatio­n about the Citrus Research Board, may be read at www. citrusrese­arch.org.

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