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Estimate of agricultural losses from Hurricane Ian is $1.03 billion

University of Florida economists have refined the estimate of agricultural losses due to Hurricane Ian: $1.03 billion. This is an estimate of the total value of seasonal crops, livestock, nursery and aquaculture products that will not be harvested or marketed as a result of the category 4 storm. Hurricane Ian made landfall on an island 20 miles west of Fort Myers on Sept. 28, 2022, and brought damaging winds and flooding to millions of acres of agricultural lands as it swept across the Florida peninsula.

The UF/IFAS Economic Impact Analysis Program (EIAP) published its detailed report, Estimated Agricultural Losses Resulting from Hurricane Ian, yesterday.  

The report estimates citrus suffered a $247.1 million loss following the hurricanes of 2022.  

"A portion of the $1.03 billion loss estimate might be offset by insurance or other risk management tools available to producers," said Christa Court, director of the EIAP and an assistant professor in the UF/IFAS food and resources economics department.  

“For example, if a grower was expecting to harvest $10 million in crops this year and the storm destroyed $6 million worth, we report a $6 million loss. That farmer might recoup some of that through insurance, but we don’t have a good way of accounting for that in our estimates,” said Court.

The latest report breaks down the $1.03 billion in final estimated losses by commodity group:

  • Citrus: $247.1 million
  • Vegetables and melons: $204.6 million
  • Greenhouse and nursery: $195.4 million
  • Non-citrus fruit: $137.7 million
  • Field and row crops: $130.2 million
  • Livestock and animal products: $119.8 million

The five counties with the greatest agricultural losses include:

  • Manatee: $126.4 million
  • Hillsborough: $104.4 million
  • Palm Beach: $88.8 million
  • Hardee: $72.5 million
  • Hendry: $72.0 million

This report does not include costs associated with asset damages or production losses that might occur in future seasons. “For example, we are not able to measure things such as the cost of repairing or replacing damaged structures or equipment, replanting perennial crops or replacing livestock,” Court said.

Court pointed out that Hurricane Ian’s impacts on Florida agriculture have been further compounded by Hurricane Nicole and hard freezes that occurred in January 2022 and December 2022.

“The same areas affected by Ian were hit, in some cases, by multiple weather events that each would have affected the agricultural yield on their own in an ordinary year,” Court said. “Our survey only covered damages and losses from Hurricane Ian, so this report is not a view of the total impact to agricultural production of all 2022 events that have impacted the sector.”

Court and her colleagues began collecting baseline data to measure agricultural losses and damages resulting from tropical cyclone events in 2017.

For more information:
Kirsten Romaguera
UF/IFAS
Tel: +1 (352) 294-3313
[email protected]
https://ifas.ufl.edu/ 

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