Credit: Photo via jumlongch/Adobe
Alico, Inc., a major Florida citrus grower, saw its harvest decrease about 51 percent during the recently completed season, after Hurricane Ian hammered the industry, according to a U.S. Securities & Exchange Commission filing this week.

The filing said the Fort Myers-based company harvested about 2.7 million boxes of fruit during the nine-month period that ended June 30 โ€” a period that generally corresponds with the 2022-2023 citrus season.

John Kiernan, the Fort Myers-based companyโ€™s president and chief executive officer, said in the filing that โ€œbox productionโ€ was down 51.4 percent from the 2021-2022 season โ€” though Alico fared better than Floridaโ€™s overall citrus industry, which had its worst season in nearly a century.

The filing said Alico has received crop-insurance money and is watching a debate in Washington, D.C., over disbursement of disaster-relief funds included in a law passed in December.

โ€œWe continue to support Florida Citrus Mutual, our industry trade group, and government agencies as they work to finalize federal relief programs available under the act (the December law); however, we cannot determine the amount, if any, of federal relief the company may be eligible for related to the damage Hurricane Ian caused us,โ€ Kiernanโ€™s statement said.

Hurricane Ian made landfall in late September in Southwest Florida and barreled through key citrus-growing areas as it crossed the state.