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hatrack

(62,265 posts)
Mon Mar 17, 2025, 07:50 AM Mar 17

Florida's Citrus Sector Essentially Dead; Production Down 90% Since 2005; Hurricanes, Greening Disease, Development

LAKE WALES, Fla. (AP) — As Trevor Murphy pulls up to his dad’s 20-acre (8-hectare) grove in one of the fastest-growing counties in the United States, he points to the cookie-cutter, one-story homes encroaching on the orange trees from all sides. “At some point, this isn’t going to be an orange grove anymore,” Murphy, a third-generation grower, says as he gazes at the rows of trees in Lake Wales, Florida. “You look around here, and it’s all houses, and that’s going to happen here.”

Polk County, which includes Lake Wales, contains more acres of citrus than any other county in Florida. And in 2023, more people moved to Polk County than any other county in the country. Population growth, hurricanes and a vicious citrus greening disease have left the Florida orange industry reeling. Consumers are drinking less orange juice, citrus growers are folding up their operations in the state and the major juice company Tropicana is struggling to stay afloat. With huge numbers of people moving into Florida’s orange growing areas, developers are increasingly building homes on what were once orange groves.

EDIT

When Hurricane Irma blasted through the state’s orange belt in 2017, Florida’s signature crop already had been on a downward spiral for two decades because of the greening disease. Next came a major freeze and two more hurricanes in 2022, followed by two hurricanes last year. A tree that loses branches and foliage in a hurricane can take three years to recover, Murphy said. Those catastrophes contributed to a 90% decline in orange production over the past two decades. Citrus groves in Florida, which covered more than 832,00 acres (336,698 hectares) at the turn of the century, populated scarcely 275,000 acres (111,288 hectares) last year, and California has eclipsed Florida as the nation’s leading citrus producer.

“Losing the citrus industry is not an option. This industry is ... so ingrained in Florida. Citrus is synonymous with Florida,” Matt Joyner, CEO of trade association Florida Citrus Mutual told Florida lawmakers recently. Nevertheless, Alico Inc., one of Florida’s biggest growers, announced this year that it plans to wind down its citrus operations on more than 53,000 acres (21,000 hectares), saying its production has declined by almost three-quarters in a decade. That decision hurts processors, including Tropicana, which rely on Alico’s fruit to produce orange juice and must now operate at reduced capacity. Orange juice consumption in the U.S. has been declining for the past two decades, despite a small bump during the COVID-19 pandemic.

EDIT

https://apnews.com/article/florida-citrus-oranges-hurricanes-agriculture-1b15f4d51cd6df41188a1884aa38dd8e

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Florida's Citrus Sector Essentially Dead; Production Down 90% Since 2005; Hurricanes, Greening Disease, Development (Original Post) hatrack Mar 17 OP
Canadians are disinclined to buy US orange juice. . . . nt Bernardo de La Paz Mar 17 #1
More Florida real estate for sale! Move the Gazans to Florida! Bernardo de La Paz Mar 17 #2
Not so sure - I think a Palestinian refugee camp surrounding Merde A Lardo would be perfect! hatrack Mar 17 #3
DUzy! Bernardo de La Paz Mar 17 #4
I live in NE FL and it's time to plant an orange tree! lark Mar 17 #5

Bernardo de La Paz

(54,847 posts)
2. More Florida real estate for sale! Move the Gazans to Florida!
Mon Mar 17, 2025, 08:39 AM
Mar 17

/sarcasm to the second but not the first.

lark

(24,937 posts)
5. I live in NE FL and it's time to plant an orange tree!
Mon Mar 17, 2025, 10:19 AM
Mar 17

I want to find a good small orange tree and maybe even a lemon tree and definitely a blackberry plant as well! We need to prepare for the bad times that are coming for us all. We are almost 100% dependent on SS for our income, having only some small pensions that give about $500/mo. Can't live on $500/mo so need to grow more of our own food and we might need to try and find part time jobs that aren't hard on the back. We've gotten a bunch of tomatoes and pepper starters and will try growing pole beans as well this year. If we can;t find starter plants soon, we will try growing them from seeds.

Growing orange en masse might not be economically feasible, but my moms orange tree here in town is producing at a huge rate and there are fruit on all the trees around the neighborhood so looks like this area is good enough (at this time).

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