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Orange juice prices hit record

Thursday, 12 January 2012


FLORIDA, Jan 11 (BBC): The price of orange juice on the global markets has hit a record high, after surging over the past few days.
Traders say the main reasons are safety concerns about juice from Brazil, the world's largest producer of orange juice, and cold weather in Florida.
The US Food and Drug Administration said carbendazim, a fungicide, has been found in shipments from Brazil.
Orange juice has risen by about 25% since the beginning of the year, to $2.12 a pound.
Carbendasim is banned in the US, but is used legally in Brazil to treat black spot, a type of mould that grows on trees.
"Consumption of carbendazim at the low levels that have been reported does not raise safety concerns," the FDA said in a letter published on its website.
The FDA said any orange juice which could be a risk to the public would be removed from supermarket shelves.
The FDA said it would "deny entry to shipments that test positive for carbendazim".
That is what has spooked the market.
In 2010-11, Brazil produced more than half of the world's orange juice, according to figures from the US Department of Agriculture. "We could have quite a shortage of product on the global market," Michael Smith, the president of T&K Futures and Options based in Florida, told the BBC World Service.
The US is the second-largest producer of orange juice, with production mainly concentrated in Florida.
A few days of cold weather in Florida has led to ice being found in some fruit and damage to tree leaves.