Here’s the latest on California peach tree removal:
- Federal relief is funding the removal of up to about 420,000 clingstone peach trees across roughly 3,000 acres in California, aimed at offsetting losses after Del Monte Foods’ cannery closures and contract cancellations. This plan was approved in late April 2026 and is intended to help growers transition to new crops and reduce oversupply ahead of the 2026 harvest. [sources cited below]
Key context and details:
- The USDA allocated up to $9 million to cover tree removal costs and transitioning land, with the expectation that removing 50,000 tons of peaches could avert around $30 million in further losses for farmers. This relief follows the shutdown of Del Monte canneries in Modesto and Hughson, which disrupted long-term contracts and market access for California peach producers. [sources cited below]
- Industry groups, including the California Canning Peach Association and the California Farm Bureau, welcomed the funding as essential after the Del Monte bankruptcy and cannery closures left growers with limited options to manage a surplus harvest. [sources cited below]
Illustrative takeaway:
- For many Central Valley growers, the immediate option to reduce risk is to remove trees and replant with alternative crops, rather than attempting to harvest peaches without a viable market. The federal program provides funding to facilitate this transition and mitigate potential losses. [sources cited below]
For reference and further reading:
Citations:
- The 420,000-tree removal figure and the $9 million federal funding are reported in multiple outlets, including FreshPlaza, SacBee, and Fruit Growers News.[2][3][4]
- Details about the Del Monte cannery closures and contract losses are discussed in the same sources, notably FreshPlaza and Independent.[6][2]
- Industry responses and the purpose of the relief program (transitioning to new crops, mitigating losses) are described in SacBee and Fruit Growers News.[3][4]
If you’d like, I can summarize the most recent articles in more detail or pull out exact figures (acreage, tonnage, and funding allocations) from each source.
Sources
California farmers are weighing california peach tree removal across about 3,000 acres, or about 420,000 clingstone peach trees, after Del Monte closed its canneries and ended long-term supply contracts. The change leaves growers deciding whether to clear orchards that took years to build and may no…
www.el-balad.comCentral Valley peach growers lost contracts for roughly 50,000 tons of cling peaches in the fallout from the Del Monte Food bankruptcy.
www.sacbee.comThey had trees with peaches but no place to send them. The U.S. Department of Agriculture has approved funds to subsidize tree removal.
amp.sacbee.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.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.comErin Keller Thursday 07 May 2026 17:57 BST
www.independent.co.ukCalifornia growers are set to destroy 420,000 peach trees following a federal relief package aimed at mitigating a $550 million industry collapse.
azat.tvRep. 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.com