If any husbands or boyfriends mess up Valentine's Day this week, they would not be able to blame it on shortage of flowers
US Customs and Border Protection estimates that about 940 million stems of cut flowers were processed by agricultural specialists at Miami International Airport in the lead-up to February 14.
In the United States, Miami accounts for about 90% of the fresh cut flowers sold for Valentine's Day, with Los Angeles accounting for the remaining 10%.
Roses, carnations, pompons, hydrangeas, chrysanthemums and gypsophila arrive on hundreds of flights, mostly from Colombia and Ecuador, to Miami on their journey to florists and supermarkets across the US and Canada.
Miami's largest flower importer is Avianca Cargo, based in Medellín, Colombia. In the past three weeks, the company has transported about 18,000 tons of flowers on 300 full cargo flights, senior vice president Diogo Elias said during a news conference last week in Miami.
“We transport flowers all year round, but specifically during the Valentine's season, we more than double our capacity because there's more than double the demand,” Elias said.
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Flowers continue to make up one of the airport's largest imports, Miami-Dade chief operation officer Jimmy Morales said. The airport received more than 3 million tons of cargo last year, with flowers accounting for nearly 400,000 tons, worth more than $1.6 billion.
“With 1,500 tons of flowers arriving daily, that equals 90,000 tons of flower imports worth $450 million just in January and February,” Morales said.
It's a big job for CBP agriculture specialists, who check the bundles of flowers for potentially harmful plant, pest and foreign animal diseases from entering the country, MIA port director Daniel Alonso said.
"Invasive species have caused $120 billion in annual economic and environmental losses to the United States, including the yield and quality losses for the American agriculture industry," Alonso said.
Colombia's flower industry was recently looking at a possible 25% tariff, as President Donald Trump quarreled with the South American country's leadership over accepting flights carrying deported immigrants. But the trade dispute came to a halt in late January, after Colombia agreed to allow the flights to land.
Colombian President Gustavo Petro had previously rejected two Colombia-bound US military aircrafts carrying migrants. Petro accused Trump of not treating immigrants with dignity during deportation and threatened to retaliate against the US by slapping a 25% increase in Colombian tariffs on U.S. goods.
Officials at Friday's news conference declined to answer any questions about politics or tariffs.