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Mexican Growers Make New Tomato Offer; Florida Growers Unmoved

Imported Tomatoes
Murphy Woodhouse/KJZZ
Workers sort through tomatoes at a packing plant in southern Sonora, Mexico.

More than two weeks after the deal governing Mexican tomato imports was terminated, negotiations for a replacement agreement do not seem to be going well.

On Wednesday, Mexican growers put forward another proposal for a new tomato suspension agreement. They say it would beef up enforcement of import rules to “an unprecedented level,” according to a release.

But the Florida Tomato Exchange, which asked the U.S. Commerce Department to end the agreement last year, described it as a “step backward” in a statement.

With negotiations at an apparent impasse, southern Arizona’s massive produce import industry is on edge.

“It’s just put a lot of uncertainty in the marketplace,” said Lance Jungmeyer, president of the Nogales-based Fresh Produce Association of the Americas.

He said that consolidation, fewer imports and job losses are likely consequences if a good new deal is not hammered out. Mexican tomatoes make up over half of the U.S. supply.

Murphy Woodhouse was a senior field correspondent at KJZZ from 2018 to 2023.