Los Angeles Times

U.S. and Mexico sign tomato trade accord

The deal ends an antidumpin­g spat and lifts prices of imports from south of the border.

- By Ricardo Lopez

After months of wrangling, the U.S. and Mexico signed a new tomato trade agreement late Monday, officially suspending an antidumpin­g investigat­ion of fresh tomatoes from south of the border and raising f loor prices for Mexican tomatoes.

The agreement, announced in February, prevented a trade war between the two countries.

U.S. growers in Florida had accused their Mexican counterpar­ts of selling their tomatoes below fair market value — a practice known as dumping — and last year asked the U.S. Commerce Department to scrap the 17- year-old trade agreement.

The pact “provides an effective remedy for the U.S. domestic industry that protects American jobs,” said Paul Piquado, U.S. assistant secretary of Commerce for import administra­tion, in a statement.

“It includes important mechanisms that strengthen our ability to enforce the agreement and maintain required coverage of Mexican tomato imports, thereby helping American tomato growers to compete on a level playing field,” Piquado said.

In the last decade, U.S. growers struggled to compete with Mexico, which ramped up its fresh tomato production. Exports from that country reached $1.81 billion in 2011, more than quadruple the $412 million in 2000

Mexican growers and importers worked closely with Commerce Department officials to draft a new agreement. There have been three previous suspension agreements covering imports of fresh tomatoes from Mexico — in 1996, 2002 and 2008.

Martin Ley, vice president of Del Campo Supreme, who represente­d Mexico growers, lauded the new trade agreement.

“After nearly nine months of sometimes difficult conversati­on and negotiatio­n with the U.S. Department of Commerce, Mexican growers will be able to continue to focus on their highest priority: producing highf lavor, naturally vine-ripened tomatoes that over the last two decades have won the favor and allegiance of growing numbers of American consumers,” Ley said in a statement. .ricardo.lopez2@latimes.com

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