Sign up for our daily Newsletter and stay up to date with all the latest news!

Subscribe I am already a subscriber

You are using software which is blocking our advertisements (adblocker).

As we provide the news for free, we are relying on revenues from our banners. So please disable your adblocker and reload the page to continue using this site.
Thanks!

Click here for a guide on disabling your adblocker.

Sign up for our daily Newsletter and stay up to date with all the latest news!

Subscribe I am already a subscriber

U.S. cut roses industry disappointed by White House decision to remove tariff protection

The California Cut Flower Commission (CCFC) and Certified American Grown (CAG), representing the American fresh cut flower industry and hundreds of workers, and farmers, expressed disappointment and concern at the Trump Administration’s decision to remove long-standing duties on imports of cut roses from Ecuador. As a result of the decision, a 6.8% duty that has helped protect the U.S. industry from large volumes of low-priced imports of Ecuadorian fresh cut roses has been eliminated.

“The U.S. industry lost scores of growers over the past 30 years due to trade policies that encouraged imports of low-priced roses from Colombia and then Ecuador, with our industry going from over a hundred to less than 20 large-scale rose producers in the U.S. today,” said Dave Pruitt, CCFC’s Chief Executive Officer and CAG’s Administrator. “It’s both surprising and disappointing that this Administration, which prides itself on protecting American agriculture and workers, would choose to put our industry at further risk. This is especially the case given the catastrophic impact the ongoing pandemic has had on American rose growers.”

Starting in the 1990s, official U.S. trade policies intended to support South America’s economic growth stimulated the growth of a massive export-oriented rose industry in Ecuador where none had existed. Ecuador has grown to become the second largest source of cut roses in the United States, using low prices to push American growers out of the market. The 6.8% tariff was the last remaining impediment to additional import growth.

“Ecuador has been consistently increasing its rose shipments to the United States, while domestic cut rose growers struggle to compete against their low-priced imports,” stated U.S. Congressman Salud Carbajal (CA-24). “The Administration’s unfortunate decision to add roses to the GSP is another devastating blow to our remaining domestic rose farmers, especially as the family farms in my district try to recover from the disastrous losses they suffered, and continue to suffer, due to the unprecedented Covid-19 shutdowns this year. Roses are America’s national flower, and this decision makes it harder for American growers to cultivate them on American soil.”

In March 2020, several importers and the Government of Ecuador petitioned the Administration to add fresh cut roses to the Generalized System of Preferences, thus eliminating the standard 6.8% duty covering these imports. CCFC and CAG opposed these requests, noting the long-term harm of growing imports from Ecuador, the already low import prices, and the risk to the overall future of American growers that would result.

“Our commitment to growing roses right here in America – the official flower of our country – remains unwavering and unchanged,” said Erik Van Wingerden, Chief Executive Officer of Myriad Flowers International. “The decision to remove these duties is a setback to our industry, but for the sake of our businesses, our workers, and our customers, we will continue to innovate and find ways to compete.”

For more information:
ccfc.org
americangrownflowers.org

Publication date: