Angela Xu/ Shanghai Daily news
Chongming mandarin growers say they still need help to sell this year's
orange crop, even though about 60 percent has now been sold.
More than
100,000 tons of mandarin oranges grown in Chongming County had been sold by
Friday, accounting for 59 percent of this year's total mandarin crop.
But
the situation is still serious, they say. Falling temperatures mean the
mandarins must be picked soon. After they are picked, they have to be sold
within a few days.
"Mandarin-planters are doomed to lose money this
year," said Mao Defei, section chief of the Chongming County Agricultural
Commission. "What we can do now is to try our best to help them reduce losses as
much as possible. So far the sale is better than we had expected."
He
said the government is now suggesting fruit companies buy mandarins for further
processing. Mandarins can be used as raw materials to produce preserves and
tinned fruit.
This season, a series of measures were adopted to help
mandarin planters after a fly pest was found in mandarins grown in Guangyuan,
Sichuan Province, in late September. No pests were found in Shanghai mandarins,
but consumers still stayed away and mandarin sales and prices plummeted.