Continued Decline in Citrus Shipments Predicted

Continued Decline in Citrus Shipments Predicted

DSCN4971U.S. citrus shipments and production will steadily decline over the next ten years, according to new projections from the U.S. Department of Agriculture.   The projection also can be used as guide to what direction produce shipments will take over the next decade.

The USDA’s recent Agricultural Projections to 2025  report said U.S. citrus fruit production, which has been affected by citrus greening disease, is forecast to drop by an average of 1% per year in the next decade.  The forecast for falling production is linked to continued declines of bearing acreage, notably in Florida, according to the report.

USDA projections call for total U.S. citrus output to drop from 18.4 billion pounds in 2015 to 14.3 billion pounds by 2025.  The projections indicate that non-citrus fruit production will rise from 36.9 billion pounds in 2015 to 39.9 billion pounds in 2025, a gain of 8% over 10 years. Tree nut production will rise at a faster clip, according to the USDA, with output pegged at 6.08 billion pounds in 2025, up 24% from 2015.

The agency said total U.S. production of fruit, nuts, and vegetables is projected to rise by 0.6% annually in the next decade.  While processing vegetable production is forecast to rise 0.8% annually over the next ten years, agency economists predict a modest 0.1% per year increase in fresh market vegetable production.

Fresh market vegetable shipments will barely increase from 41.3 billion pounds in 2015 to 41.7 billion pounds by 2025, according to the USDA.