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How Puerto Rico Lost Its Home-Grown Food, But Might Find It Again

A Puerto Rican sugar refinery in 1973. In 1964, sugar accounted for almost half of all agricultural sales on the island, and sugar manufacturing accounted for 23 percent of all wages that Puerto Ricans earned. Then, within just a few years, the industry collapsed.
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A Puerto Rican sugar refinery in 1973. In 1964, sugar accounted for almost half of all agricultural sales on the island, and sugar manufacturing accounted for 23 percent of all wages that Puerto Ricans earned. Then, within just a few years, the industry collapsed.

Most of the news from Puerto Rico lately has been terrible. The island's government just declared that it cannot repay its bondholders and will carry out drastic cuts in education and social services. On Wednesday, thousands of students at the University of Puerto Rico voted to continue a protest strike.

Food, though, is delivering a modest ray of hope. That hope will be on display most prominently this weekend, at a conference called Agrohack, which celebrates the island's growing band of young food entrepreneurs, from chefs to coffee farmers. Last year, Agrohack drew 650 people. This year, organizers expect 1,500.

Across Puerto Rico, in fact, there's a new wave of interest in food and farming. People are thronging to new farmers markets. Chefs are making a point of finding local sources of food.

According to Ricardo Fernandez, who is CEO of Puerto Rico Farm Credit, the largest agricultural lender on the island, it's a dramatic break from Puerto Rico's past.

"Historically, agriculture has had a stigma in Puerto Rico," he says. "It was for low-end workers, people who didn't get an education. We're making it more modern, more hip."

It's astonishing, in fact, just how far farming in Puerto Rico has fallen over the past half-century. According to USDA statistics, total sales from Puerto Rico's farms have declined by two-thirds, in constant dollars, since 1964. Prime agricultural land, much of it previously used to grow sugar cane, sits idle. Despite its tropical climate, which allows farmers to grow food year-round, Puerto Rico imports 80 percent of its food.

During a recent trip to Puerto Rico, I heard many different reasons for Puerto Rico's dependence on imported food. Javier Rivera Aquino, a former secretary of agriculture for Puerto Rico, traced it back to the island's long history as a Spanish colony, when native farming traditions gave way to large plantations of sugar and coffee that were shipped back to Europe. Food, meanwhile, was imported.

"They were taught to produce what they don't consume, and they were taught not to produce what they consume," he says. "That's the kind of dependence that was created under that colonial system."

In 1964, sugar accounted for almost half of all agricultural sales on the island, and sugar manufacturing accounted for 23 percent of all wages that Puerto Ricans earned. Then, within just a few years, the industry collapsed.

According to an analysis by the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, Puerto Rico's sugar cane industry was crippled by government policies that prevented sugar producers from getting bigger and more efficient. It couldn't compete with sugar producers in places like Louisiana.

Puerto Rico's government now owns the land where sugar once grew. The land is available for investors to lease. Yet much of it still sits idle.

Fernandez sees both economic and cultural reasons for this lack of investment. Economically, Puerto Rican producers had difficulty competing with large-scale food producers in the rest of the United States. Egg producers in Puerto Rico, for instance, were wiped out by cheap imports from the mainland.

"We didn't protect ourselves," Fernandez says. "You can see it in sector after sector." Also, Puerto Rican consumers didn't place any extra value on home-grown food.

But Fernandez also points to something else, the lack of "an entrepreneurial mindset among farmers." Or, as Rivera Aquino puts it, "we have been taught to work for somebody else. We have not been trained to deal with risk and become entrepreneurs."

Both of them say that the situation is now changing rapidly. Many consumers now are willing to pay extra for food grown on the island. University students are flocking to classes on agriculture. And Fernandez says the economic crisis is forcing people to try new things.

"There's a resurgence now, because we have to re-invent ourselves," he says.

Some entrepreneurs even see new chances to reverse the historical pattern, and export Puerto Rican food to the mainland U.S. and to Europe. An Israeli company is doing this with mangoes. Others see an opportunity in the growing U.S. demand for grass-fed beef.

"There aren't too many places under the U.S. flag where you have 365 days a year when you can truly pasture-feed," says Mike McCloskey, who owns a large dairy operation in Indiana but is currently launching a livestock grazing operation in Puerto Rico.

"Every acre is, at least theoretically, three times as productive as most acres in our northern hemisphere," says McCloskey, who grew up on the island. "I don't see any reason why Puerto Rico can't get from 85 percent imported food down to 50 percent."

Many of the new entrepreneurial ventures are small, or not yet in full production. Ricardo Fernandez says they haven't yet translated into a significant increase in food production on the island. "From what we know, overall agricultural production is flat," he says. But he expects that to change within a few years. "It's at a turning point, but we need to do more," he says.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Dan Charles is NPR's food and agriculture correspondent.