Forecast Issued for Florida Citrus Shipments; Georgia Still Loading Veggies

Forecast Issued for Florida Citrus Shipments; Georgia Still Loading Veggies

DSCN4322Florida navel shipments will be down significantly this season, while other citrus items should show gains.

Florida citrus shipments will show small declines with navel oranges, grapefruit and tangerines, but valencias loadings are expected to increase, according to the first official USDA forecast.

Growers in Florida expect to ship 1.5 million cartons of navels, down 22 percent from 1.9 million cartons a year ago.   If the forecast holds, it will be the lowest since the USDA began forecasting navels as a separate variety.

Shipments of valencias, of which 97 percent go to the processors, is up 9 percent.  Overall Florida citrus volume should rise 3 percent from the 2013-14 season’s 104.8 million cartons to 108 this season.   Grapefruit shipments are predicted at 15 million cartons, down 4 percent from 15.7 million cartons last year.

Both white and red grapefruit varieties saw 4 percent declines from the previous season.  Total Florida tangerine production is seen being off 3 percent.  Total Florida citrus shipments are pegged at 126.7 million cartons, down from last season’s 123.9 million cartons, but considerably lower than the 2009-13 average of 169 million cartons.  Though a majority of the state’s oranges ship to processed plants, about 70 percent of its navels, half of its grapefruit and two-thirds of its tangerines ship fresh.

Overall, Florida is deader-than-a-door-nail this year.  Citrus hasn’t really taken off, and there’s only moderate arrivals of imports at various Florida ports.

Southern and central Georgia vegetable shipments are modest, but ranging from green beans to peppers, cukes and squash.

Georgia vegetables – grossing about $2600 to New York City.