Maine’s independent senator says the state’s blueberry growers need help from the federal government to survive the Trump administration’s trade battle with China.
Sen. Angus King said Wednesday the value of Maine’s wild blueberry exports to China are on pace to drop by nearly 97 percent since 2017. Maine is America’s largest producer of wild blueberries, which are smaller than cultivated blueberries and are widely used in frozen and processed products.
King said it’s unfair that Maine wild blueberry growers haven’t been included in President Trump’s farm bailout programs. He said the blueberries are “an iconic Maine agricultural product” that has “lost a piece of its future.”
The Maine wild blueberry industry is facing other difficulties outside of the trade dispute with China. Prices for the fruit have been much lower than they were earlier this decade. The size of the harvest last year was also the lowest in more than a decade.
King delivered his remarks via a letter to U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer and U.S. Department of Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue. He also spoke about the issue on the Senate floor later Wednesday.
Maine’s wild blueberry growers are getting hit with a double whammy – their exports to China have decreased by nearly 97% since the trade war began, AND they’ve missed out on the President’s farm bailout lottery. Even worse: no one can explain why they lost out. pic.twitter.com/pJQFIhBbIo
— Senator Angus King (@SenAngusKing) December 4, 2019
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