Pull peach trees? Or grow without a buyer? Sutter County ...
Central Valley peach growers lost contracts for roughly 50,000 tons of cling peaches in the fallout from the Del Monte Food bankruptcy.
www.sacbee.comHere’s the latest on California peach tree removals tied to the Del Monte situation.
Federal relief: In late April–May 2026, U.S. USDA announced up to $9 million to help California growers remove clingstone peach trees and transition to other crops. The program aims to remove about 420,000 trees across roughly 3,000 acres to mitigate losses from Del Monte’s bankruptcy and cannery closures. This funding targets Central Valley orchards affected by the contraction in processing capacity and canceled long-term contracts.[1][3][5]
Context and impact: Del Monte Foods’ bankruptcy and subsequent cannery closures (notably Modesto) disrupted markets for California peaches, leaving growers with contracts canceled and limited buyers. The relief effort is designed to reduce oversupply and prevent further losses by encouraging orchard removal and crop diversification.[2][4][5]
Regional coverage: News outlets across California report growers preparing to remove large blocks of clingstone trees (about 3,000 acres, ~420,000 trees) as part of a broader shift away from traditional peach production in the Central Valley following Del Monte’s plant closures.[4][6][8]
If you want, I can pull direct quotes or provide a brief one-page summary with key figures (trees, acres, expected market impact) and a timeline of funding approvals. I can also track any updates on implementation (application window, state-local coordination, and farmer eligibility) and map which counties are most affected.
Central Valley peach growers lost contracts for roughly 50,000 tons of cling peaches in the fallout from the Del Monte Food bankruptcy.
www.sacbee.comPeach growers in Northern California have been forced to scale back production this year after Del Monte Foods announced it was closing its cannery down south in Modesto.
www.cbsnews.comPeach growers in Northern California have been forced to scale back production this year after Del Monte Foods announced it was closing its cannery down south in Modesto.
www.cbsnews.comCalifornia farmers are preparing to destroy an estimated 420,000 peach trees after the collapse of a major fruit processor left growers across the Central Valley without buyers for tens of thousands of tons of fruit. The closure of Del Monte Foods’ canneries in Modesto and Hughson in April devastated many multi-generational farms that relied on [...]
ground.newsUSDA will provide up to $9M to remove over 400K clingstone peach trees in California, helping growers after Del Monte’s cannery closure.
fruitgrowersnews.comRep. Mike Thompson (D-CA-04), Senator Adam Schiff (D-CA), and Rep. David Valadao (R-CA-22) announced that the U.S. Department of Agriculture has granted their request for aid and will make up…
www.freshplaza.comThe federal support will go toward removing Central Valley peach trees and planting new crops in their place.
www.sacbee.comErin Keller Thursday 07 May 2026 17:57 BST
www.independent.co.uk