Spain: A plan for the Valencian citrus industry

Published 2022년 2월 15일

Tridge summary

The European Union's decision to require cold treatment for oranges imported from South Africa and other sub-Saharan African countries is seen as a significant move to protect the Valencian citrus industry from the threat of pests and to level the playing field for European producers. This decision, aimed at combating the risk from the False moth, follows pressure from the citrus sector and the support of the Department of Agriculture and the Ministry. The Ministry of Agriculture is also advocating for citrus fruits to be designated as a 'sensitive product' to address current commercial imbalances and is seeking support from the Ministry of Consumer Affairs to ensure that only safely produced citrus fruits are imported.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

Farmers know this well. This has been a complicated citrus campaign for many producers, who have shown their discouragement and their difficulties in maintaining crops. A situation that has been a consequence, to a large extent, of massive imports from third countries with phytosanitary requirements that Brussels does not allow its member states and that have plummeted prices and have opened the door to the possible introduction of pests that would threaten future crops. The excess supply in the European markets, with massive imports of citrus fruits from South Africa and other third countries, has caused that at the end of last January the prices of the Valencian orange ranged between 10 and 15 cents per kilo. on tree. Prices with which it is difficult to cover production costs, especially if they compete with fruits that concur with more lax restrictions in phytosanitary matters and with a logic of commercial privilege in the community markets that endanger own production. ...

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