Proposed deal would squash U.S.-Mexico tomato war

AP

A proposed agreement on fresh tomatoes imported into the U.S. from Mexico would strengthen antidumping enforcement and reset minimum wholesale prices, the Commerce Department says.

The agreement with Mexico’s tomato industry would suspend an investigation initiated after Florida tomato growers complained that Mexican producers were selling fresh tomatoes for less than the production cost.

The proposal would replace a pact that’s been in place for 16 years. The Commerce Department on Saturday released a draft of the agreement for public comment.

Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack says it would allow the U.S. tomato industry “to compete on a level playing field.”

U.S. tomato growers are tentatively backing the proposal. Edward Beckman, president of Certified Greenhouse Farmers, said the new agreement must address pricing, coverage and enforcement of trade laws.

“We believe that the Department of Commerce and Mexico have struck a deal that meets those three tests, and we’re hopeful and optimistic that we’ll be able to compete under fair trade conditions,” Beckman said in a statement released Sunday. “Much work remains to have the agreement fully and faithfully implemented, and continuous monitoring and enforcement will be critical.”

Florida produces much of America’s winter tomato supply, and growers there asked the Commerce Department to end the fresh tomato importation agreement. The Florida growers claimed their Mexican counterparts have been “dumping” — selling for less than the cost of production — their product in the U.S., driving down prices and costing jobs. The growers’ complaint had the support of farmworker representatives.