Sour Future: Florida Citrus Production Faces Further Decline

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UF Glow variety of citrus. Photo taken 11-17-17

Source: Citrus Industry

Florida orange and red grapefruit production, already at historically low levels, will likely decline for years, according to a leading citrus economist. Tom Spreen, University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences professor emeritus, calculated Florida crop output through the 2031-32 season based on various yield and tree replacement assumptions.

Oranges and red grapefruit are Florida’s top-producing varieties.  

ORANGES
Under Spreen’s best-case scenario, orange production would stay below the 2020-21 season level of 52.8 million boxes through the 2028-29 season. It would be 2029-30 before output reached 53.2 million boxes, barely surpassing the 2020-21 production level. To achieve the best-case scenario, growers would have to replant lost trees much more aggressively than they have in recent years.  

At different yield scenarios using the current 80% rate of replacing lost trees, orange production would dip to 37 million boxes or 47.8 million boxes by 2031-32. Under those scenarios, production would not reach the 2020-21 level at any point over the next 10 years.

RED GRAPEFRUIT
Red grapefruit would not reach the 2020-21 production level of 3.48 million boxes over the next 10 years, even under Spreen’s best-case scenario. Under either the current 50% replanting rate or an aggressive 100% replanting rate, red grapefruit would peak at 3.16 million boxes in 2022-23 and decline from there. The 10-year low point would come in the 10th year, 2031-32, with production of either 2.41 or 2.85 million boxes.

HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE
As recently as the 2003-04 season, before HLB was discovered in the state, Florida produced 242 million boxes of oranges and 40.9 million boxes of grapefruit; most of the grapefruit production was red.

Spreen made his projections during an Aug. 10 webinar hosted by the Florida Department of Citrus (FDOC). Throughout most of the webinar, Spreen answered questions posed by FDOC Director of Economic and Market Research Marisa Zansler.