Florida Tomato Exchange defends suspension agreement filing
Tomato Suspension Agreement Florida Tomato Exchange Fresh Produce Association of the Americas
On June 16, the FTE filed a request with the U.S. Department of Commerce to terminate the Tomato Suspension Agreement. “This request was based on established facts and U.S. antidumping law,” FTE officials said in the release. “This is not Florida vs. Mexico. This is legal process supported by the vast majority of American tomato growers.”
Days later, the Fresh Produce Association of the Americas (FPAA), a trade group that represents importers of Mexican produce, “issued a press release attacking the FTE and wildly mischaracterizing the issues at hand,” according to the FTE release.
The current suspension agreement suspends those margins from going into effect as antidumping duties. Such agreements allow the Department of Commerce to suspend antidumping duties as long as the agreements stop injury caused by unfair imports. None of the tomato suspension agreements, dating back to 1996, have worked to stop the injury caused by dumped Mexican tomatoes, which is why the FTE finally asked the Commerce Department to terminate the suspension, according to the release.
“Instead of legal arguments against the FTE’s request, the FPAA has mischaracterized the request as a fight between Mexico and Florida. It is not. The FTE is the ‘domestic petitioner’ in the antidumping case and has always received broad support on this issue from tomato growers across the country. This list includes growers in Alabama, Arkansas, California, Georgia, Michigan, New Jersey, North Carolina, Puerto Rico, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Virginia. In fact, U.S. antidumping law requires antidumping petitions to have majority support from the national industry. FTE’s own membership includes companies that produce tomatoes in many different states.”
“With Mexico now controlling almost 70% of the U.S. tomato market, the FPAA’s claim that FTE is seeking a monopoly is absurd,” FTE officials said in the release. “In reality, the FTE is seeking the survival of the U.S. tomato industry before it is completely crushed by unfairly traded Mexican tomatoes. Antidumping duties imposed under U.S. law, following USMCA and WTO rules, will not stop market access for Mexican tomatoes. In fact, the duties would fall to zero if Mexican tomato exporters price their tomatoes fairly, according to the law.”
The Tomato Suspension Agreement should be terminated because it has not met the statutory requirement to protect against unfairly traded Mexican tomatoes, which continue to injure the American tomato industry, FTE officials said in the release. “This failure requires a legal default to antidumping duties on Mexican tomatoes,” FTE said in the release.