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Florida Citrus Industry Tries to Recover from Milton
Orange and grapefruit producers had just barely recovered from 2022's Hurricanes Ian and Nicole and were already facing an upcoming growing season.
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LampLighter
Joined 2013/04/13Visited 2024/11/21
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.... Nearly three weeks after deadly Hurricane Milton tore through Florida's prime citrus producing region, industry leaders are still assessing how big a hit already ailing growers may have absorbed, although many are optimistic a worst-case scenario was averted. Orange and grapefruit producers had just barely recovered from 2022's Hurricanes Ian and Nicole and were already facing an upcoming growing season in which orange production was expected to plunge by 16% when Milton arrived Oct. 9. The storm blasted directly through Florida's Citrus Belt, including Polk, Highlands, Hardee, Polk, Desoto, and St. Lucie counties, damaging trees, blowing fruit off branches, producing downpours and spawning deadly tornadoes, including a twister in St. Lucie County that killed six people and significantly damaged an iconic family-owned citrus business. An initial estimate by the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services issued Oct. 17 put the statewide crop and infrastructure losses from Milton at between $1.5 billon and $2.5 billion. That number didn't separate out citrus losses from other crops, but the agency noted the majority of the state's citrus acreage was in Milton's path and that "significant production losses" are expected. ...
Orange and grapefruit producers had just barely recovered from 2022's Hurricanes Ian and Nicole and were already facing an upcoming growing season in which orange production was expected to plunge by 16% when Milton arrived Oct. 9.
The storm blasted directly through Florida's Citrus Belt, including Polk, Highlands, Hardee, Polk, Desoto, and St. Lucie counties, damaging trees, blowing fruit off branches, producing downpours and spawning deadly tornadoes, including a twister in St. Lucie County that killed six people and significantly damaged an iconic family-owned citrus business.
An initial estimate by the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services issued Oct. 17 put the statewide crop and infrastructure losses from Milton at between $1.5 billon and $2.5 billion.
That number didn't separate out citrus losses from other crops, but the agency noted the majority of the state's citrus acreage was in Milton's path and that "significant production losses" are expected. ...
#1 | Posted by LampLighter at 2024-10-30 12:36 AM | Reply
OK, so the Florida Natural Orange Juice i prefer to buy is now going to be more expensive?
Even more expensive than their going from a 64 ounce carton to a 48 ounce carton for the same price?
Way to go Florida, apparently trying to hide the price increase.
#2 | Posted by LampLighter at 2024-10-30 12:40 AM | Reply
The hurricanes were God's retribution for the orange industry using Anita Bryant.
#3 | Posted by mattm at 2024-10-30 07:53 PM | Reply
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