The California Table Grape Commission will have an extra US$2.85m in its marketing budget for the upcoming 2019 season.
The peak industry body has been awarded the money through the USDA Agricultural Trade Promotion (ATP) programme, which has been set up to help mitigate adverse effectsfrom tariffs imposed by multiple countries on US products.
Over US$200m has been allocated to organisations throughout the country, with the Table Grape Commission one of 17 California-based ATP recipients. The Washington Apple Commission (WAC) received over US$8.4min funding from the programme.
The Table Grape Commission said it would spend most of its grant on consumer advertising, something it usually does not have the ability to fund in offshore markets.
A 53 per cent tariff imposed on California grapes by China made the 2018 season a difficult one for the state’s growers. Data from the USDA indicates shipments to China – the third largest volume market for California table grapes – were down by more than 50 per cent last year, with a knock-on effect being felt in other markets.
“Exports to other Asian markets were down as well,” said Kathleen Nave, California Table Grape Commission president. “Sales in the domestic market were hurt because competing commodities also lost sales in China due to tariffs and needed to sell the fruit domestically. It was a very, very difficult year.”
The ATP funds will be used by theTable Grape Commission during the 2019 California table grape season, which starts in May and runs through until January 2020.