The Guardian (USA)

Is Florida running out of orange juice? Record prices put the squeeze on consumers

- Lauren Aratani

Has breakfast in the US ever been this expensive? The recent eggflation seen across the country has caused an uproar, and now orange juice is adding to the financial pain.

Orange juice futures – contracts to buy and sell OJ – have almost doubled to $2.60 per pound over the last year, up from $1.40 a year ago, leading to price surges in stores. In January, orange juice not from concentrat­e hit $10 a gallon, while juice from concentrat­e hit $6.27 per gallon.

The increase has not gone unnoticed. “This is my favorite,” a TikTok user in a grocery store says as he holds up a glistening 89-fluid-ounce orange juice bottle in a video posted last month. “Simply Orange juice: $7. That’s simply too high.”

The price increase highlights a serious problem for Florida – the state that is synonymous with the orange and produces the most orange juice in the country.

This season the US agricultur­e department predicts the state will produce 16m 90lb boxes of oranges, a 61% drop compared with last season when the state produced 41m boxes. It’s a worrying decrease but nothing compared with the fall from its peak in the 1990s when the state was producing 200m boxes a year.

“While the current crop size is a real disappoint­ment, we’re not giving up,” Matt Joyner, CEO of Florida Citrus Mutual, a trade associatio­n, said in a statement on Wednesday.

Florida’s woes have opened up an opportunit­y for Brazil, the world’s largest exporter of orange juice. Orange juice shipments from that country were up 58% in the first four months of this season as Florida oranges saw a small yield.

Over the last decade the state has ramped up efforts to protect its industry, which is vulnerable to extreme weather events like hurricanes and has been experienci­ng a pandemic of its own through a prolific citrus disease.

The citrus industry was once the dominant industry in the state, a role that now belongs to tourism, but the citrus industry still covers 375,000 acres (151,757 hectares) in the state and supports over 32,000 jobs, bringing in economic contributi­ons of about $6.6bn (£5.48bn), according to the University of Florida.

“It’s farm income, but it’s also the income that comes from the communitie­s that are served by the industry,” said Marisa Zansler, director of economic and market research for the Florida department of citrus. “There’s a lot of economic contributi­on in agricultur­al areas of Florida that aren’t necessaril­y served by tourism.”

Hurricane Ian tore through central Florida – home to many of the state’s citrus groves – in September as a category 4 storm, wreaking havoc on the state’s citrus farms. The University of Florida estimates the damage to the state’s agricultur­al sector was $1.07bn (£890m), with citrus growers bearing $247m (£205m) in damages. In early February, a bipartisan from Florida’s congressio­nal delegation introduced a bill that would give US Department of Agricultur­e (USDA) grants to farmers to help them recover from the damages.

Along with the stress from Hurricane Ian, the orange industry has been dealing with a pandemic of citrus greening among its groves for over a decade.

The disease is spread by an insect, the Asian citrus psyllid, that feeds on the stems and leaves of trees and then infects them with bacteria. The disease was first found in the state in 2005, and by 2015, it was found in all citrus-producing counties, according to the state’s department of citrus. Growers said in 2015 that as much as 90% of their trees were infected.

Greening hurts the tree’s circulatio­n and nutrition status, leading it to produce green, smaller, misshapen fruit that tastes bitter. An infected tree can die five years after infection. The bugs can be carried across the state by heavy winds, making hurricanes even more devastatin­g to the crop.

The state has invested millions into researchin­g and developing treatments for citrus greening over the years, and efforts to replant old and infected trees have been under way. This year, the state is looking to allocate $29m (£24m) for protection and research in the citrus industry, according to the Tampa Bay Times.

“We’ve just had pressure from both sides of the spectrum, from weatherrel­ated events as well as dealing with [greening],” Zansler said. “The industry is working toward resolving a lot of these challenges and replanting, and it’s going to take some time.”

While solutions to citrus greening are still being explored, growers in the state are experiment­ing with nutritiona­l supplement­s to help make trees stronger in the face of greening and trunk injections that help the trees fight the disease’s bacteria. Researcher­s have also been working on developing modified citrus trees that are resistant to the disease.

Even with the one-two punch of weather and disease Florida’s orange trees have been taking, growers are still optimistic about the future of the industry as they see these efforts to fight the disease start to bear fruit – literally.

“I’ve grown up in this industry … I remember groves years ago and what they look like, and what groves look like now and what the fruit looks like. This year, before the hurricane, we were on a good track,” said Emma Keller, executive director of the Peace River Valley Citrus Growers Associatio­n. “Despite everything that happens and what they get hit with, [growers] keep pushing, because they truly love this industry and what they do. They are a super-resilient group.”

 ?? Illustrati­on: Ulises Mendicutty/The Guardian ??
Illustrati­on: Ulises Mendicutty/The Guardian

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