The Day

Report: State’s agricultur­e industry moving toward more specialty crops

- By MARTHA SHANAHAN Day Staff Writer

University of Connecticu­t researcher­s found that Connecticu­t’s agricultur­e industry generates between $3.3 billion and $4 billion for the state’s economy every year, and specialty crops like fruit and wine grapes are a growing part of the industry.

The total agricultur­al contributi­on to the state’s economy — which totaled $266.6 billion in the last quarter of 2016 — is slightly down from numbers collected in 2007 by researcher­s at the school’s Zwick Center for Food and Resource Policy.

The new report, based on 2015 data and released last week, showed that sectors such as wineries, vegetable and fruit farming, milk manufactur­ing, egg production and aquacultur­e all grew between 2007 and 2015.

Sales from traditiona­l agricultur­al activities like tobacco farming, com-

mercial fishing, and commercial logging declined during the same period, according to the report.

Wineries grew significan­tly within the state’s agricultur­al industry, according to the report, with $85.8 million in sales in 2015 — up from $30 million in 2007.

Commercial fishing declined in sales, but the researcher­s said Connecticu­t is consistent with other states in shifting more of the market to aquacultur­e, which grew in sales by almost 100 percent from 2007.

“The agricultur­al industry in Connecticu­t appears to be restructur­ing into new market segments where innovation, diversity, and economic viability are key,” they wrote. “This may be a consequenc­e of external factors such as competitio­n from other regions and countries as well as natural shocks like climate change.”

“Compared to the 2010 report, we observed an ongoing shift toward specialty crops and sectors that add value beyond the farm gate,” Rigoberto Lopez, the director of the Zwick Center and the study’s lead author, said at a news conference Friday. “This is perhaps a promising ... direction for the future of agricultur­e.”

The study marked the first time a statewide assessment of agricultur­al output had been completed since the 2010 study, which used data from 2007. It was supported by UConn’s Department of Cooperativ­e Extension and reviewed by the Connecticu­t Department of Agricultur­e and the Connecticu­t Farm Bureau.

The agricultur­al industry supports 21,000 jobs in the state and accounts for nearly 14 percent of Connecticu­t’s land.

“The agricultur­e sector in Connecticu­t is healthy, it’s changing and adapting to what the consumer is looking for in terms of specialty crops that are locally grown and for sale across the state of Connecticu­t,” U.S. Rep. Joe Courtney, D-2nd District, said at the news conference last week.

 ?? SEAN D. ELLIOT/THE DAY ?? Hydroponic­ally grown Boston Bibb Lettuce grows in the greenhouse at Maple Lane Farms in Preston in 2011.
SEAN D. ELLIOT/THE DAY Hydroponic­ally grown Boston Bibb Lettuce grows in the greenhouse at Maple Lane Farms in Preston in 2011.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States