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Florida citrus industry shows improvement one year after worst season in nearly a century

Sour orange trees grow in the Grassy Island grove in Okeechobee, Fla., on Friday, May 12, 2023.
Lauren Whiddon
/
WUFT News
Sour orange trees grow in the Grassy Island grove in Okeechobee, Fla., on Friday, May 12, 2023.

TALLAHASSEE --- Florida鈥檚 citrus industry limped to the end of the 2023-2024 growing season, with farmers hoping newly planted and recovering trees can avoid hurricane damage this year.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture on Friday released a final report about the 2023-2024 season and slightly boosted estimates of orange production from a June report. Overall citrus numbers were up 11.4 percent from the 2022-2023 season 鈥 but 2022-2023 had the lowest production in nearly 100 years.

Matt Joyner, executive vice president and CEO of Florida Citrus Mutual, expressed optimism about the industry, while acknowledging the industry鈥檚 ongoing recovery from 2022鈥檚 Hurricane Ian requires 鈥渇avorable weather conditions.鈥

鈥淲e just really need to make it through this year,鈥 Joyner said. 鈥淟et these trees recover, and let鈥檚 get a good harvest and something we can start building some momentum on.鈥

The industry has been in a hyper-recovery mode since Hurricane Ian caused massive damage to groves as it swept across the state. Growers have expressed a need for two or three seasons for impacted trees to recover and new plantings to take hold.

READ MORE: Pongamia trees grow where Florida citrus once flourished, offering renewable energy

鈥淲e are seeing the fruit sizing up, and the tree health is looking pretty good. We are hopeful that coming into the (next) season and the harvest, that the trees are going to be able to hold onto that fruit,鈥 Joyner said. 鈥淎s they鈥檝e had a little bit of time to recover from the storms, tree health is looking better.鈥

Even before Hurricane Ian, the industry had seen reduced production as it confronted residential and commercial growth, increased foreign competition and the effects of citrus greening disease, which has decimated groves for a little more than two decades.

The production numbers released Friday were 11.8 percent below what the U.S. Department of Agriculture expected in an initial forecast for the 2023-2024 season and more than 52 percent lower than production during the 2021-2022 season, which was before Ian.

Sen. Ben Albritton, a Wauchula Republican and citrus grower who is slated to become Senate president in November, said last month he intends to 鈥渄eploy energy, resources, you name it at the state level to help intervene into what is 鈥 a really, really bad situation.鈥

Friday鈥檚 report estimated the state produced 17.96 million 90-pound boxes of oranges during the 2023-2024 season. That was up from 17.86 million boxes projected in a June report. It also was higher than the 15.82 million boxes produced during the 2022-2023 season, which was the lowest orange total since the 1934-1935 season.

Grapefruit production ended the 2023-2024 season at 1.79 million boxes, which was lower than the 1.81 million boxes produced in 2022-2023 and the 3.33 million boxes in 2021-2022.

Before the 2022-2023 season, the last time Florida鈥檚 grapefruit production was under 2 million boxes was in the 1911-1912 harvest.

Specialty crops, primarily tangerines and tangelos, ended the 2023-2024 season at 450,000 boxes, the lowest ever recorded. Specialty crops were first listed separately in the citrus report after the 1919-1920 season, when the total was 478,000 boxes.

Growers filled 480,000 boxes of specialty crops in the 2022-2023 season, which was down from 750,000 boxes in 2021-2022.

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