Thanks in part to climate change, vegetable prices have soared in the U.S.

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Vegetable prices in the United States were up nearly 40% in November over the previous month, according to new figures from the Labor Department, and climate change is one of the reasons why.

Thanks to a significantly diminished snowpack in 2022 following the driest January and February in recorded history in the state, California's Central Valley has also struggled to produce its usual output of fruits and vegetables.

"In October most of the nation's lettuce comes from the Salinas Valley and they are having very low production because the virus affected their crop," Bruce Babcock, agricultural economist at the University of California Riverside,."A case of romaine is $75 dollars now and last January it was $25 so that's almost a tripling of prices at the wholesale level."

 

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This is pretty silly... the main problem is obviously supply chain problems, inflation and Covid.

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