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Tide changes for US pecan growers after phase-one agreement

China Daily | Updated: 2019-12-31 09:17
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Randy Hudson, a pecan grower in Georgia, the United States, shows his pecan trees. [Photo/Xinhua]

NEW YORK-Pecan growers in the United States are optimistic that the China-US phase-one trade deal would bolster their fortunes, especially at a time when most of the growers are struggling to make ends meet by selling pecans at a discounted price in the domestic market.

Most of the pecan growers in the US had suffered substantial losses since the start of the US-initiated trade friction against China, the largest market for the US pecan industry.

Randy Hudson, a pecan grower in Irwin County, Georgia, said he and his fellow pecan farmers were "encouraged" by the fact that leaders of the two countries are working on the tariff issue.

The Chinese side announced on Dec 13 that China and the US have agreed on the text of a phase-one economic and trade agreement based on the principle of equality and mutual respect.

While waiting for the details of the trade deal, Hudson said, "we would have hoped that all tariffs would be removed, at least back to the original level."

China was the top market for US pecans. In 2017, US in-shell pecan exports reached more than $300 million, and a staggering 76.37 percent were sold to China, according to pecanreport.com.

Hudson was among the first pecan growers to enter the Chinese market and has maintained a close business relationship with his partners in China.

Since he brought the nuts to the Chinese market in 1999, Hudson and his fellow pecan growers and exporters, as well as their Chinese partners, have managed to grow the business in China, with an increasing number of consumers interested in the nuts' health benefits and rich flavor.

Before the latest trade tensions, Hudson's company exported 4,500 to 9,000 tons of pecans every year, accounting for about 20 to 30 percent of Georgia's total annual output of pecans.

To satisfy Chinese demand, the company bought pecans from other growers. The Chinese market accounted for 90 percent of the company's total sales revenue.

However, increased tariffs had been eroding Hudson's business expansion in China, costing him tens of thousands of dollars in losses and the whole pecan industry more than $10 million.

Irwin County exported nearly $50 million' worth of pecans to China in 2017, but the volume dropped to zero after US-China trade tensions began. In 2018, the county's pecan exports plunged to a record low of less than $10 million.

Pecan prices declined about 40 percent due to oversupply caused by trade tensions, according to Hudson's estimation. This means the local industry suffers more from trade tensions than from damage caused by hurricanes.

The US government provided pecan growers subsidies equal to $146 an acre to help them recover from losses due to trade friction. But that was far from enough.

"It's been very, very difficult to be able to balance our income with our expenses under the burden of the tariff," said Hudson.

Like many of his fellow growers and exporters, Hudson still tries to maintain a good relationship with his Chinese clients.

Although business has paused for the moment, both sides exchange information and keep each other updated about their businesses, hoping to resume cooperation soon. Keeping the relationships afloat is key and often personal.

"We are friends first," he said.

Xinhua

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