Florida Crystals: Difference between revisions
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Florida Crystals | Florida Crystals stands as one of the largest privately held sugar producers in the United States, headquartered in West Palm Beach, Florida. The company operates vast sugarcane plantations primarily in South Florida's [[Everglades Agricultural Area]] (EAA), spanning roughly 180,000 acres across Palm Beach, Hendry, and Glades counties. Founded in the 1960s by the Fanjul family, Florida Crystals became a dominant force in American sugar production, refining and marketing both granulated sugar and specialty sweetening products. Through its parent organization the ASR Group, the company owns the [[Domino Sugar]] brand outright rather than operating under a licensing arrangement.<ref>{{cite web |title=About ASR Group |url=https://www.asr-group.com/about |work=ASR Group |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref> | ||
That matters. As a major agricultural enterprise in Palm Beach County, Florida Crystals has shaped the local economy, workforce demographics, and environmental policy discussions for more than five decades. It's also drawn sustained scrutiny for its environmental record and political influence. | |||
== History == | == History == | ||
The story starts in the early 1960s. The Fanjul family, Cuban-born entrepreneurs with deep roots in the island's sugar industry, established their initial operations in South Florida after fleeing Cuba following Fidel Castro's nationalization of private industry. Before the revolution, the family had been associated with the Czarnikow-Rionda sugar empire, one of the most powerful sugar trading and milling operations in Cuba.<ref>{{cite news |title=The Sweetest Deal |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1996/02/25/magazine/the-sweetest-deal.html |work=The New York Times |date=1996-02-25}}</ref> Their early Florida operations focused on acquiring available agricultural land in the EAA, a region already known for sugarcane cultivation but far smaller in scale than it'd eventually become. | |||
Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, the Fanjul family strategically expanded their landholdings and processing capacity, eventually consolidating operations under the Florida Crystals brand as their primary corporate entity. The company modernized its processing facilities during this period and implemented advances in milling and refining at its West Palm Beach-area plants. By the 1990s, Florida Crystals had secured distribution relationships with major national retailers and food manufacturers. They reached consumers across the United States under both its own brand and through Domino Sugar, which the Fanjul family's broader corporate holdings came to own outright.<ref>{{cite web |title=About ASR Group |url=https://www.asr-group.com/about |work=ASR Group |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref> | |||
The early 2000s brought further expansion into specialty sweetening products and organic sugar lines. Florida Crystals launched branded organic cane sugar offerings to meet growing consumer demand for less-processed alternatives, positioning | The early 2000s brought further expansion into specialty sweetening products and organic sugar lines. Florida Crystals launched branded organic cane sugar offerings to meet growing consumer demand for less-processed alternatives, positioning itself in premium market segments less exposed to commodity pricing swings. More recently, the company expanded its operations through technology partnerships. A 2024 agreement with process intelligence firm Celonis represents a significant investment in enterprise AI tools across its supply chain and manufacturing operations, intended to improve operational efficiency at scale.<ref>{{cite web |title=Florida Crystals Corporation Expands Agreement with Celonis to Power Enterprise AI with Process Intelligence |url=https://www.celonis.com/news/press/florida-crystals-corporation-expands-agreement-with-celonis-to-power-enterprise-ai-with-process-intelligence |work=Celonis |date=2024 |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref> | ||
== Corporate Structure == | == Corporate Structure == | ||
Florida Crystals Corporation operates as the primary agricultural and processing arm of the broader Fanjul family business empire, | Florida Crystals Corporation operates as the primary agricultural and processing arm of the broader Fanjul family business empire, organized under the holding company Fanjul Corp. The Fanjul family, led in recent decades by brothers Alfonso and José "Pepe" Fanjul, controls both Florida Crystals and the ASR Group. ASR owns the Domino Sugar brand and operates sugar refining facilities in several U.S. cities as well as internationally.<ref>{{cite news |title=The Fanjuls, the First Family of Big Sugar |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/economy/the-fanjuls-the-first-family-of-big-sugar/2012/03/16/gIQA8KXGHS_story.html |work=The Washington Post |date=2012-03-16}}</ref> This corporate setup makes Florida Crystals one component of a vertically integrated sugar enterprise that extends from raw cane production in South Florida to refined sugar distribution across North America and beyond. | ||
Its primary domestic competitor within the EAA is [[U.S. Sugar Corporation]], which farms comparable acreage in the same region and operates its own milling and processing facilities. Together, these two companies account for the vast majority of Florida's sugarcane output. They've historically aligned on major policy questions, particularly federal sugar price support programs, while competing for contracts with food manufacturers and retailers. | |||
== Geography == | == Geography == | ||
Florida Crystals' operational footprint encompasses approximately 180,000 acres primarily distributed across the Everglades Agricultural Area in Palm Beach, Hendry, and Glades counties. The EAA, located directly south of Lake Okeechobee, represents the largest contiguous area of sugarcane cultivation in the continental United States. This geographic concentration provides significant logistical advantages | Florida Crystals' operational footprint encompasses approximately 180,000 acres, primarily distributed across the Everglades Agricultural Area in Palm Beach, Hendry, and Glades counties. The EAA, located directly south of Lake Okeechobee, represents the largest contiguous area of sugarcane cultivation in the continental United States. This geographic concentration provides significant logistical advantages. Centralized processing, reduced transportation costs, and coordinated agricultural management across vast plantation areas all follow from it. The company's main processing facilities are located in or near West Palm Beach, positioning the operation at the commercial and transportation hub of South Florida. Sugarcane grows in the flat terrain characteristic of south-central Florida, where subtropical climate, water access, and naturally fertile muck soils support high agricultural yields. | ||
But the company's plantation geography has generated ongoing environmental considerations. The EAA sits in a transitional zone between Lake Okeechobee to the north and the Everglades ecosystem to the south. Sugarcane cultivation in this region involves irrigation systems, drainage management, and water control infrastructure that interconnects with regional hydrological systems. Florida Crystals operates within a framework of state and federal water management regulations administered by entities including the [[South Florida Water Management District]] and the [[U.S. Army Corps of Engineers]]. Its geographic position has made it a significant stakeholder in water quality and quantity policy discussions affecting South Florida's broader environmental management, particularly regarding phosphorus levels and freshwater flows to the Everglades.<ref>{{cite web |title=Sugar Industry and Water Management in the Everglades Agricultural Area |url=https://www.dep.state.fl.us/everglades/watershed-management |work=Florida Department of Environmental Protection |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref> | |||
== Economy == | == Economy == | ||
Florida Crystals represents a substantial component of South Florida's agricultural economy and ranks among the region's largest private employers. The company directly employs approximately 2,000 workers across its plantations, processing facilities, and corporate operations, with seasonal fluctuations reflecting harvest cycles. Sugar processing and refining provide year-round employment at higher skill levels | Florida Crystals represents a substantial component of South Florida's agricultural economy and ranks among the region's largest private employers. The company directly employs approximately 2,000 workers across its plantations, processing facilities, and corporate operations, with seasonal fluctuations reflecting harvest cycles. Sugar processing and refining provide year-round employment at higher skill levels. Agricultural harvesting concentrates labor demand during winter months when sugarcane reaches maturity. The company's economic impact extends beyond direct employment to include supplier relationships with equipment manufacturers, transportation companies, agricultural service providers, and wholesale food purchasers. It's privately held, so annual revenues aren't publicly disclosed. | ||
The company participates in national and international sugar markets, though domestic production operates under significant federal tariff protection and quota systems that limit sugar imports. Florida Crystals' product mix extends beyond commodity sugar to include organic lines and specialty sweeteners, reflecting a strategic move toward premium segments less exposed to commodity price volatility. Economic data indicates that Florida Crystals' operations contribute substantially to Palm Beach County and surrounding counties' tax bases through property taxes, corporate taxes, and sales taxes from operational expenditures. The company's capital investments in facility modernization and agricultural technology represent ongoing commitments to South Florida's broader economic infrastructure. | The company participates in national and international sugar markets, though domestic production operates under significant federal tariff protection and quota systems that limit sugar imports. Florida Crystals' product mix extends beyond commodity sugar to include organic lines and specialty sweeteners, reflecting a strategic move toward premium segments less exposed to commodity price volatility. Economic data indicates that Florida Crystals' operations contribute substantially to Palm Beach County and surrounding counties' tax bases through property taxes, corporate taxes, and sales taxes from operational expenditures. The company's capital investments in facility modernization and agricultural technology represent ongoing commitments to South Florida's broader economic infrastructure. | ||
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== Notable Operations and Facilities == | == Notable Operations and Facilities == | ||
Florida Crystals maintains multiple processing and refining facilities throughout South Florida | Florida Crystals maintains multiple processing and refining facilities throughout South Florida. Major installations are located near West Palm Beach and extend into surrounding counties where raw sugarcane production occurs. The Okeelanta facility in South Bay represents one of the region's largest sugarcane processing complexes, capable of crushing substantial volumes of raw sugarcane annually during peak harvest seasons. This facility performs the initial processing step. It converts harvested sugarcane into raw sugar through mechanical crushing, juice extraction, and crystallization. The company's refining operations, located closer to West Palm Beach's commercial and distribution infrastructure, perform secondary refinement that produces granulated sugar meeting commercial specifications and consumer packaging formats. These facilities incorporate modern equipment for juice processing, boiling, centrifugation, and packaging that meets food safety standards established by the [[U.S. Food and Drug Administration]].<ref>{{cite web |title=Florida Crystals Company Operations and Facilities Overview |url=https://www.wpb.org/business-development/major-industries |work=City of West Palm Beach Development Services |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref> | ||
The company's research and development programs include agricultural initiatives focused on sugarcane variety development, pest management, irrigation efficiency, and yield improvement. It collaborates with the [[University of Florida]]'s [[Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences]] and private agricultural research organizations on projects addressing crop productivity and environmental performance. Florida Crystals also operates logistics and distribution networks including warehousing, railcar transport for moving raw sugar to refineries, and trucking coordination for refined sugar distribution to customers throughout the continental United States. A 2024 expansion of the company's enterprise technology agreement with Celonis is intended to bring process intelligence tools to bear on manufacturing and supply chain operations, which the company says will improve efficiency across these interconnected logistics functions.<ref>{{cite web |title=Florida Crystals Corporation Expands Agreement with Celonis to Power Enterprise AI with Process Intelligence |url=https://www.celonis.com/news/press/florida-crystals-corporation-expands-agreement-with-celonis-to-power-enterprise-ai-with-process-intelligence |work=Celonis |date=2024 |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref> | |||
== Environmental Record and Controversies == | == Environmental Record and Controversies == | ||
Florida Crystals' operations in the EAA have been a source of sustained environmental controversy, centered largely on the company's contribution to phosphorus pollution in water flowing south toward the Everglades. Sugarcane cultivation depletes naturally low-phosphorus muck soils and produces agricultural runoff that, when discharged into the broader South Florida water management system, can dramatically elevate phosphorus concentrations in Everglades-bound water. Elevated phosphorus alters the Everglades' native ecosystem | Florida Crystals' operations in the EAA have been a source of sustained environmental controversy, centered largely on the company's contribution to phosphorus pollution in water flowing south toward the Everglades. Sugarcane cultivation depletes naturally low-phosphorus muck soils and produces agricultural runoff that, when discharged into the broader South Florida water management system, can dramatically elevate phosphorus concentrations in Everglades-bound water. Elevated phosphorus alters the Everglades' native ecosystem. It favors invasive cattails over native sawgrass and disrupts the food web on which wading birds and other wildlife depend. Litigation over phosphorus discharges from the EAA has involved the State of Florida, the federal government, and environmental advocacy groups over multiple decades.<ref>{{cite web |title=Sugar Industry and Water Management in the Everglades Agricultural Area |url=https://www.dep.state.fl.us/everglades/watershed-management |work=Florida Department of Environmental Protection |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref> | ||
The company has also faced legal challenges over its public environmental claims. | The company has also faced legal challenges over its public environmental claims. A federal judge declined to dismiss a "greenwashing" lawsuit against Florida Crystals, allowing claims to proceed that alleged the company's marketing statements about environmental sustainability were misleading given its actual environmental record in the EAA.<ref>{{cite news |title=Judge Won't Toss 'Greenwashing' Case Against Florida Sugar Giant |url=https://www.eenews.net/articles/judge-wont-toss-greenwashing-case-against-florida-sugar-giant/ |work=E&E News by POLITICO |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref> The case reflects broader national scrutiny of agricultural companies' environmental claims and remains ongoing. | ||
On the restoration front, Florida Crystals has publicly supported the Everglades Agricultural Area (EAA) Reservoir project, a key component of the [[Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan]] (CERP) administered by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the South Florida Water Management District. In 2025, the company issued a public statement commending the State of Florida and the Army Corps for pushing the EAA Reservoir toward completion, describing the project as one it has supported for nearly 30 years.<ref>{{cite press release |title=Florida Crystals Commends State of Florida, Army Corps for Pushing EAA Reservoir Toward Completion |url=https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/florida-crystals-commends-state-of-florida-army-corps-for-pushing-eaa-reservoir-toward-completion-302743769.html |work=PR Newswire |date=2025 |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref> The reservoir is designed to store and treat water from the EAA before releasing it southward into the Everglades, reducing harmful phosphorus concentrations. Critics have noted that the sugar industry's stated support for the reservoir has coexisted with decades of lobbying against more stringent water quality rules and restoration timelines. | On the restoration front, Florida Crystals has publicly supported the Everglades Agricultural Area (EAA) Reservoir project, a key component of the [[Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan]] (CERP) administered by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the South Florida Water Management District. In 2025, the company issued a public statement commending the State of Florida and the Army Corps for pushing the EAA Reservoir toward completion, describing the project as one it has supported for nearly 30 years.<ref>{{cite press release |title=Florida Crystals Commends State of Florida, Army Corps for Pushing EAA Reservoir Toward Completion |url=https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/florida-crystals-commends-state-of-florida-army-corps-for-pushing-eaa-reservoir-toward-completion-302743769.html |work=PR Newswire |date=2025 |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref> The reservoir is designed to store and treat water from the EAA before releasing it southward into the Everglades, reducing harmful phosphorus concentrations. Critics have noted that the sugar industry's stated support for the reservoir has coexisted with decades of lobbying against more stringent water quality rules and restoration timelines. | ||
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== Political Influence == | == Political Influence == | ||
The Fanjul family's political activities have attracted sustained attention from journalists and policy researchers. The family has made significant campaign contributions to candidates and political committees across party lines | The Fanjul family's political activities have attracted sustained attention from journalists and policy researchers. The family has made significant campaign contributions to candidates and political committees across party lines. Reporters at the ''New York Times'' and the ''Washington Post'' have credited the family with wielding outsized influence over U.S. sugar policy, particularly the federal sugar program, which supports domestic sugar prices through tariffs and import quotas that benefit large EAA producers.<ref>{{cite news |title=The Sweetest Deal |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1996/02/25/magazine/the-sweetest-deal.html |work=The New York Times |date=1996-02-25}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |title=The Fanjuls, the First Family of Big Sugar |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/economy/the-fanjuls-the-first-family-of-big-sugar/2012/03/16/gIQA8KXGHS_story.html |work=The Washington Post |date=2012-03-16}}</ref> | ||
The federal sugar program has been a recurring flashpoint in farm bill negotiations | Alfonso Fanjul leads the family's Democratic-aligned political activities. José Fanjul has supported Republican candidates. Each brother has maintained access to multiple presidential administrations, a dynamic that's drawn repeated reporting as a case study in the sugar industry's bipartisan political reach. | ||
The federal sugar program has been a recurring flashpoint in farm bill negotiations. Consumer groups and food manufacturers argue that it raises domestic sugar prices well above world market levels at the expense of U.S. consumers and downstream food producers. Florida Crystals and other EAA producers have consistently defended the program as essential to maintaining domestic sugar production capacity. The company's lobbying activities are conducted in part through the [[Sugar Cane Growers Cooperative of Florida]] and through direct federal lobbying disclosures filed under the [[Lobbying Disclosure Act]]. | |||
== Products == | == Products == | ||
Florida Crystals markets sugar under its own brand name and, through ASR Group, under the Domino Sugar brand. The Florida Crystals brand includes conventional granulated white sugar, raw cane sugar, and a line of organic cane sugar products. | Florida Crystals markets sugar under its own brand name and, through ASR Group, under the Domino Sugar brand. The Florida Crystals brand includes conventional granulated white sugar, raw cane sugar, and a line of organic cane sugar products. Its organic line targets consumers seeking minimally processed sweeteners grown without synthetic pesticides or fertilizers. The company also produces turbinado sugar, powdered sugar, and light and dark brown sugar varieties sold in retail packaging and in bulk formats for food service and industrial food manufacturing customers. | ||
Domino Sugar, owned by ASR Group | Domino Sugar, owned by ASR Group, is one of the most widely recognized sugar brands in the United States. It's produced in part from Florida Crystals' raw sugar output and distributed through grocery retailers nationally. ASR Group also markets sugar under the C&H brand on the West Coast, further extending the Fanjul family's branded retail reach across the country.<ref>{{cite web |title=About ASR Group |url=https://www.asr-group.com/about |work=ASR Group |access-date=2026-02-26}}</ref> | ||
[[Category:West Palm Beach landmarks]] | [[Category:West Palm Beach landmarks]] | ||
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[[Category:Privately held companies of the United States]] | [[Category:Privately held companies of the United States]] | ||
``` | ``` | ||
== References == | |||
<references /> | |||
Latest revision as of 14:11, 12 May 2026
```mediawiki Template:Infobox company
Florida Crystals stands as one of the largest privately held sugar producers in the United States, headquartered in West Palm Beach, Florida. The company operates vast sugarcane plantations primarily in South Florida's Everglades Agricultural Area (EAA), spanning roughly 180,000 acres across Palm Beach, Hendry, and Glades counties. Founded in the 1960s by the Fanjul family, Florida Crystals became a dominant force in American sugar production, refining and marketing both granulated sugar and specialty sweetening products. Through its parent organization the ASR Group, the company owns the Domino Sugar brand outright rather than operating under a licensing arrangement.[1]
That matters. As a major agricultural enterprise in Palm Beach County, Florida Crystals has shaped the local economy, workforce demographics, and environmental policy discussions for more than five decades. It's also drawn sustained scrutiny for its environmental record and political influence.
History
The story starts in the early 1960s. The Fanjul family, Cuban-born entrepreneurs with deep roots in the island's sugar industry, established their initial operations in South Florida after fleeing Cuba following Fidel Castro's nationalization of private industry. Before the revolution, the family had been associated with the Czarnikow-Rionda sugar empire, one of the most powerful sugar trading and milling operations in Cuba.[2] Their early Florida operations focused on acquiring available agricultural land in the EAA, a region already known for sugarcane cultivation but far smaller in scale than it'd eventually become.
Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, the Fanjul family strategically expanded their landholdings and processing capacity, eventually consolidating operations under the Florida Crystals brand as their primary corporate entity. The company modernized its processing facilities during this period and implemented advances in milling and refining at its West Palm Beach-area plants. By the 1990s, Florida Crystals had secured distribution relationships with major national retailers and food manufacturers. They reached consumers across the United States under both its own brand and through Domino Sugar, which the Fanjul family's broader corporate holdings came to own outright.[3]
The early 2000s brought further expansion into specialty sweetening products and organic sugar lines. Florida Crystals launched branded organic cane sugar offerings to meet growing consumer demand for less-processed alternatives, positioning itself in premium market segments less exposed to commodity pricing swings. More recently, the company expanded its operations through technology partnerships. A 2024 agreement with process intelligence firm Celonis represents a significant investment in enterprise AI tools across its supply chain and manufacturing operations, intended to improve operational efficiency at scale.[4]
Corporate Structure
Florida Crystals Corporation operates as the primary agricultural and processing arm of the broader Fanjul family business empire, organized under the holding company Fanjul Corp. The Fanjul family, led in recent decades by brothers Alfonso and José "Pepe" Fanjul, controls both Florida Crystals and the ASR Group. ASR owns the Domino Sugar brand and operates sugar refining facilities in several U.S. cities as well as internationally.[5] This corporate setup makes Florida Crystals one component of a vertically integrated sugar enterprise that extends from raw cane production in South Florida to refined sugar distribution across North America and beyond.
Its primary domestic competitor within the EAA is U.S. Sugar Corporation, which farms comparable acreage in the same region and operates its own milling and processing facilities. Together, these two companies account for the vast majority of Florida's sugarcane output. They've historically aligned on major policy questions, particularly federal sugar price support programs, while competing for contracts with food manufacturers and retailers.
Geography
Florida Crystals' operational footprint encompasses approximately 180,000 acres, primarily distributed across the Everglades Agricultural Area in Palm Beach, Hendry, and Glades counties. The EAA, located directly south of Lake Okeechobee, represents the largest contiguous area of sugarcane cultivation in the continental United States. This geographic concentration provides significant logistical advantages. Centralized processing, reduced transportation costs, and coordinated agricultural management across vast plantation areas all follow from it. The company's main processing facilities are located in or near West Palm Beach, positioning the operation at the commercial and transportation hub of South Florida. Sugarcane grows in the flat terrain characteristic of south-central Florida, where subtropical climate, water access, and naturally fertile muck soils support high agricultural yields.
But the company's plantation geography has generated ongoing environmental considerations. The EAA sits in a transitional zone between Lake Okeechobee to the north and the Everglades ecosystem to the south. Sugarcane cultivation in this region involves irrigation systems, drainage management, and water control infrastructure that interconnects with regional hydrological systems. Florida Crystals operates within a framework of state and federal water management regulations administered by entities including the South Florida Water Management District and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. Its geographic position has made it a significant stakeholder in water quality and quantity policy discussions affecting South Florida's broader environmental management, particularly regarding phosphorus levels and freshwater flows to the Everglades.[6]
Economy
Florida Crystals represents a substantial component of South Florida's agricultural economy and ranks among the region's largest private employers. The company directly employs approximately 2,000 workers across its plantations, processing facilities, and corporate operations, with seasonal fluctuations reflecting harvest cycles. Sugar processing and refining provide year-round employment at higher skill levels. Agricultural harvesting concentrates labor demand during winter months when sugarcane reaches maturity. The company's economic impact extends beyond direct employment to include supplier relationships with equipment manufacturers, transportation companies, agricultural service providers, and wholesale food purchasers. It's privately held, so annual revenues aren't publicly disclosed.
The company participates in national and international sugar markets, though domestic production operates under significant federal tariff protection and quota systems that limit sugar imports. Florida Crystals' product mix extends beyond commodity sugar to include organic lines and specialty sweeteners, reflecting a strategic move toward premium segments less exposed to commodity price volatility. Economic data indicates that Florida Crystals' operations contribute substantially to Palm Beach County and surrounding counties' tax bases through property taxes, corporate taxes, and sales taxes from operational expenditures. The company's capital investments in facility modernization and agricultural technology represent ongoing commitments to South Florida's broader economic infrastructure.
Notable Operations and Facilities
Florida Crystals maintains multiple processing and refining facilities throughout South Florida. Major installations are located near West Palm Beach and extend into surrounding counties where raw sugarcane production occurs. The Okeelanta facility in South Bay represents one of the region's largest sugarcane processing complexes, capable of crushing substantial volumes of raw sugarcane annually during peak harvest seasons. This facility performs the initial processing step. It converts harvested sugarcane into raw sugar through mechanical crushing, juice extraction, and crystallization. The company's refining operations, located closer to West Palm Beach's commercial and distribution infrastructure, perform secondary refinement that produces granulated sugar meeting commercial specifications and consumer packaging formats. These facilities incorporate modern equipment for juice processing, boiling, centrifugation, and packaging that meets food safety standards established by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.[7]
The company's research and development programs include agricultural initiatives focused on sugarcane variety development, pest management, irrigation efficiency, and yield improvement. It collaborates with the University of Florida's Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences and private agricultural research organizations on projects addressing crop productivity and environmental performance. Florida Crystals also operates logistics and distribution networks including warehousing, railcar transport for moving raw sugar to refineries, and trucking coordination for refined sugar distribution to customers throughout the continental United States. A 2024 expansion of the company's enterprise technology agreement with Celonis is intended to bring process intelligence tools to bear on manufacturing and supply chain operations, which the company says will improve efficiency across these interconnected logistics functions.[8]
Environmental Record and Controversies
Florida Crystals' operations in the EAA have been a source of sustained environmental controversy, centered largely on the company's contribution to phosphorus pollution in water flowing south toward the Everglades. Sugarcane cultivation depletes naturally low-phosphorus muck soils and produces agricultural runoff that, when discharged into the broader South Florida water management system, can dramatically elevate phosphorus concentrations in Everglades-bound water. Elevated phosphorus alters the Everglades' native ecosystem. It favors invasive cattails over native sawgrass and disrupts the food web on which wading birds and other wildlife depend. Litigation over phosphorus discharges from the EAA has involved the State of Florida, the federal government, and environmental advocacy groups over multiple decades.[9]
The company has also faced legal challenges over its public environmental claims. A federal judge declined to dismiss a "greenwashing" lawsuit against Florida Crystals, allowing claims to proceed that alleged the company's marketing statements about environmental sustainability were misleading given its actual environmental record in the EAA.[10] The case reflects broader national scrutiny of agricultural companies' environmental claims and remains ongoing.
On the restoration front, Florida Crystals has publicly supported the Everglades Agricultural Area (EAA) Reservoir project, a key component of the Comprehensive Everglades Restoration Plan (CERP) administered by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the South Florida Water Management District. In 2025, the company issued a public statement commending the State of Florida and the Army Corps for pushing the EAA Reservoir toward completion, describing the project as one it has supported for nearly 30 years.[11] The reservoir is designed to store and treat water from the EAA before releasing it southward into the Everglades, reducing harmful phosphorus concentrations. Critics have noted that the sugar industry's stated support for the reservoir has coexisted with decades of lobbying against more stringent water quality rules and restoration timelines.
Political Influence
The Fanjul family's political activities have attracted sustained attention from journalists and policy researchers. The family has made significant campaign contributions to candidates and political committees across party lines. Reporters at the New York Times and the Washington Post have credited the family with wielding outsized influence over U.S. sugar policy, particularly the federal sugar program, which supports domestic sugar prices through tariffs and import quotas that benefit large EAA producers.[12][13]
Alfonso Fanjul leads the family's Democratic-aligned political activities. José Fanjul has supported Republican candidates. Each brother has maintained access to multiple presidential administrations, a dynamic that's drawn repeated reporting as a case study in the sugar industry's bipartisan political reach.
The federal sugar program has been a recurring flashpoint in farm bill negotiations. Consumer groups and food manufacturers argue that it raises domestic sugar prices well above world market levels at the expense of U.S. consumers and downstream food producers. Florida Crystals and other EAA producers have consistently defended the program as essential to maintaining domestic sugar production capacity. The company's lobbying activities are conducted in part through the Sugar Cane Growers Cooperative of Florida and through direct federal lobbying disclosures filed under the Lobbying Disclosure Act.
Products
Florida Crystals markets sugar under its own brand name and, through ASR Group, under the Domino Sugar brand. The Florida Crystals brand includes conventional granulated white sugar, raw cane sugar, and a line of organic cane sugar products. Its organic line targets consumers seeking minimally processed sweeteners grown without synthetic pesticides or fertilizers. The company also produces turbinado sugar, powdered sugar, and light and dark brown sugar varieties sold in retail packaging and in bulk formats for food service and industrial food manufacturing customers.
Domino Sugar, owned by ASR Group, is one of the most widely recognized sugar brands in the United States. It's produced in part from Florida Crystals' raw sugar output and distributed through grocery retailers nationally. ASR Group also markets sugar under the C&H brand on the West Coast, further extending the Fanjul family's branded retail reach across the country.[14] ```