Georgia peaches are heading to Mexico for the first time in 27 years!
Georgia’s Ag Commissioner calls it a major win for the state’s peach growers and industry. The breakthrough came thanks to collaboration between growers, the peach industry, and a company called Ravine.
This milestone flips the script on trade with Mexico: instead of importing peaches, the U.S. is now exporting its own.
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U.S. produce growers face a structural disadvantage—cheaper imports driving down prices while rising labor costs squeeze margins. Without new policies or technology, profitability remains uncertain.
Higher tariffs may shield some U.S. crops but risk retaliation, lost markets, and higher costs for growers. The WTO disputes highlight the fragile balance between trade policy, farm exports, and input supply chains.
Produce markets are in transition as fall approaches, with leafy greens and berries under pressure, while vegetables like celery, broccoli, and cauliflower are finding firmer ground.
Let’s take a look at harvest progress as of early September 2025, across all 50 U.S. States, prepared by Market Day Report anchor and RFD-TV Markets Expert Tony St. James.
Saving Producers $50,000,000 A Year