Michigan’s apple industry is getting some relief after the second record-breaking harvest in a row.
The harvest was so big that growers and processors had trouble selling all of it.
But now, the U.S. Department of Agriculture says it will buy $100 million worth of fresh apples and processed apple products.
The purchase is national, but Michigan is a top state for apple growing and processing.
Dawn Drake, with the Michigan Agricultural Cooperative Marketing Association, says she began advocating for the buyout in late summer.
“What it does is allow processors to go out and purchase apples that are in storage and have no home,” said Drake. “And it trickles down to growers in the respect that they’ve already paid to have those apples harvested.”
She says the USDA purchase helps move that product along, which would otherwise sit in storage. Between the crop surplus and high prices at the grocery store, Drake says retail sales for apples lagged.
Source: interlochenpublicradio.org
Photo Credit: istock-rixipix
Categories: Michigan, Crops, Fruits and Vegetables, Education