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US: Price increase for this year’s onion crop in Idaho and Oregon

Yields are down, but prices are up for this year’s onion crop in the Treasure Valley of Idaho and Oregon in North America.

A harsh winter, wet spring and hot summer combined to make this a difficult year for farmers. Growers and shippers who spoke with the Capital Press say yields will be off by up to 30 percent this year.

But a shortage is generally good for prices. A 50-pound bag of jumbo yellow onions is selling for $10-11, up from $5.50 to $6 this time last year.

Kay Riley, the marketing order chairman for the Idaho-Eastern Oregon Onion Committee, said buyers from Mexico are snapping up a lot of onions, and that’s also impacting the market.

Farmer Bruce Corn said 2017 is a complete turnaround from last year, when farmers had “incredible yields but low prices.”

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