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Economic Feasibility of Using Solar Energy in the Production of Greenhouse Tomatoes

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 May 2017

Pritam S. Dhillon
Affiliation:
Department of Agricultural Economics and Marketing, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ 08903
Daniel Rossi
Affiliation:
Department of Agricultural Economics and Marketing, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ 08903
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Extract

The energy crunch of the mid-seventies has adversely affected the greenhouse tomato industry in the North Central and Northeast regions. Traditionally, these two regions had been the main producers of greenhouse tomatoes in the U.S. where, because of the climatic restriction, greenhouse tomato production evolved to supply fresh tomatoes during winter and spring months. Since greenhouse producers in the north rely on fossil fuels for heating purposes, their production costs have escalated, thereby tending to price these tomatoes out of the market. In recent years many greenhouse tomato producers in the northern regions have either ceased production or switched into alternative enterprises. For instance, the Census of Agriculture reported 45 growers in Massachusetts in 1974, with covered areas of 535,842 square feet; by 1979, according to extension experts, the number declined to 25 and the area declined to between 150,000 and 200,000 square feet. The number of growers in New Jersey declined from 42 in the 1974 census to only 19 in 1979. Similar declines have occurred in New York and Pennsylvania.

Type
Contributed Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Northeastern Agricultural and Resource Economics Association 

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Footnotes

New Jersey Agricultural Experiment Station Publication No. D02131-4-82, supported by State funds and the U.S. Hatch Act. The authors are grateful to Diane Shurgalla and Mitchell Morehart for their help in preparation of this paper and Thomas Slane for reviewing an earlier draft.

References

Dhillon, P. S., Griffin, D. W. and Taylor, G. A. Tomato Production Under Plastic Greenhouses in New Jersey, A.E. 358, Department of Agricultural Economics and Marketing, Rutgers University, 1976.Google Scholar
Internal Revenue Service. Investment Tax Credit, Publication 527 (Rev. January 1981), U.S. Department of the Treasury.Google Scholar
Roberts, William J., Sinkins, Joel C., Janes, Harry W., and Mears, David R.Performance of the Rutgers Solar Heated Greenhouse Vegetable Facility,” presented at the 1979 Summer Meeting of ASAE and CSAE, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Canada, June 24–27, 1979.Google Scholar