The "Wonderful" Empire: How Land, Nuts and Water Made America's Biggest Farmer (2024)

Stewart Resnick, America’s biggest farmer, continues to expand. But with California’s limited water resources, nature might just push back.

In the Central Valley, the sunshine is plentiful but the moisture is not.

Stewart Resnick is the biggest farmer in the United States and the overwhelming majority of his crops are rooted in the fertile lands of California, where the sunshine is plentiful, but the moisture is not.

Along with his marketing guru wife, Lynda, the billionaire Resnick couple are global tree nut magnates who have moved food trends towards healthier snacks. They’ve also become recognized throughout the Golden State as philanthropic benefactors and well-connected members of the ruling class. In short, the Resnicks are walking definition of a power couple, more at home in their opulent Beverley Hills mansion than the dusty farm fields of the Central Valley. As we have written about before, the Resnicks have a long stream of questionable business deals focused on acquiring freshwater access and rights in a state where water is both a limiting factor and prized possession.

Lots of land, lots of water, and the water use is nuts.

Stewart Resnick is more of an accidental agriculturalist who had previously made it big through a cleaning company, an alarm business and even as co-owner (with Lynda) of the Franklin Mint. The transition to farming came after he bought a small slice of Central Valley citrus groves in the late 1970s. Thousands more acres were added as drought led to cut-rate prices in dry Kern County, a part of southern Central Valley where oranges bloom next to oilfields.

Today, the Resnicks’ Wonderful Company is an impressive conglomerate that stands as the world’s largest grower and processor of almonds and pistachios, in addition to holding a bevy of other successful brands, like Halos mandarin oranges, POM Wonderful pomegranate juice, bottled water brand, FIJI, and the flower delivery company, Telaflora. At the bottom of all these products is what flows up to the branches, fruit and into the bottles; namely, water. Water isn’t just important to the Resnicks’ agricultural domain, it’s essential in immense volumes and in decent enough quality. The availability of water for farming is already a primary concern and with so much agricultural land, a lot is at stake to keep irrigation water flowing. In an authoritative recounting of this empire entitled, “A Kingdom from Dust,” which appeared in February’s edition of The California Sunday Magazine, author Mark Arax describes Stewart Resnick’s (aka, the “Nut King”) vast landholdings and its relationship to water.

“At age 81, he’s gotten so big, he doesn’t know how big. Last time he checked, he told me he owned 180,000 acres of California. That’s 281 square miles. He is irrigating 121,000 of those acres. This doesn’t count the 21,000 acres of grapefruits and limes he’s growing in Texas and Mexico. He uses more water than any other person in the West. His 15 million trees in the San Joaquin Valley consume more than 400,000 acre-feet of water a year. The city of Los Angeles, by comparison, consumes 587,000 acre-feet.”

Let that wash over you. As the biggest farmers with the most irrigated land, the Resnicks use more water than anyone else, even when all those urban Los Angeles users showering in the morning and watering their lawns, maybe surreptitiously, at night. When Josh Harkinson of Mother Jones took an exhaustive look at the Resnicks’ and their water use in his excellent article, the best estimates for all the Wonderful Company’s California-grown crops – from almonds to pomegranates – tallied up to more water than all LA home use combined. For more detail, see the chart below, courtesy of Mother Jones. (Note that the 400,000 acre-feet estimate equates to 493 million cubic meters and is in the ballpark of 450 million cubic meters.)

The "Wonderful" Empire: How Land, Nuts and Water Made America's Biggest Farmer (1)

Time For a Smaller Footprint

The Resnicks and Wonderful are still riding high, especially after the substantial storms in the preceding wet season broke the California drought, filled rivers and reservoirs and recharged aquifers, stocking the Kern County Water Bank. The Resnicks not only managed to get through the drought, but also had bountiful seasons, showing that their efforts to commandeer water have worked.

The question is, how long will it last? As the effects of climate change in California deepens, climate scientists expect more heat and less water in already hot and dry areas like the Central Valley, thus water acquisition will become even more limited and water more valuable. A recent review of the climate science on California’s agriculture found that the Valley’s perennial crops, such tree nuts, could experience drastically reduced yields and acreage due in part to higher average temperatures. Running a business so dependent on water, particularly one that grows perennial tree crops and requires irrigation, not rain, how can the Resnicks’ Wonderful expansion continue?

Another intrepid California billionaire named John Vidovich, scion of the Vidovich fortune, has a different path forward for the Golden State, one that he’s established in his own land and water grabs. After years of observing, fighting and working with the Resnicks, Vidovich has a unique perspective on Stewart Resnick and the acres of crops that have made Wonderful a success, as he tells Arax:

“‘Let’s call it what it is,’ [Vidovich] says. ‘It’s gambling. Stewart gambled and won for many years. He gambled on the price of nuts going up, and he gambled on the water never going dry. He kept planting more and more trees. But he got too big. Too many pistachios. Too many almonds. Too many pomegranates. Like a lot of empires, it comes to an end.’

‘So what about you?’ I ask. ‘What kind of empire are you trying to build?’

‘I’m here to show the farmer that ag’s footprint needs to get smaller.’

I chew on his answer for a second. The calculation and hubris inside it. The truth a mercenary has landed on. ‘I get it. You’re the one who leads the way on selling agricultural water to the cities. Fallowing the farm until the footprint gets smaller and smaller. Making hundreds of millions of dollars in the process?’

‘It can’t be farmed like it was,’ he says.”

If it wasn’t apparent to Resnick and other large agricultural water users, the plentiful, reliable water counted on in the past is likely coming to an end, no matter how much water is stored underground. Too much and not enough of anything never works out well, especially for the water essential to us all, and the food that we all need. Time to change.

You can read more about the Resnick’s other major water exploitation – Fiji Water – here and here.

Originally published at GRACE’s former blog Ecocentric by Kai Olson-Sawyer on 03.27.2018. Image: Almond grove by Alexrc, Adobe. Chart courtesy of Mother Jones.

The "Wonderful" Empire: How Land, Nuts and Water Made America's Biggest Farmer (2024)

FAQs

Who is the most famous farmer in the US? ›

All that aside, here's one person's list of the ten most famous farmers.
  • Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826) Advertisem*nt. ...
  • Harriet Williams Russell Strong (1844-1926) ...
  • Bill Berry (1958-) ...
  • Joel Salatin (1957-) ...
  • Jiroemon Kimura (1897-2013) ...
  • Leah Penniman (1980-) ...
  • Jimmy Carter (1924-) ...
  • Adrian Bell (1901-1980)
Mar 11, 2022

How did Stewart Resnick make his money? ›

Stewart Resnick is more of an accidental agriculturalist who had previously made it big through a cleaning company, an alarm business and even as co-owner (with Lynda) of the Franklin Mint.

Who is the richest pistachio farmer? ›

Stewart Resnick, 81, owner of The Wonderful Company and 65 percent of the nation's pistachios, has had a distinct and sweeping effect on agriculture in the Golden State. Throughout his life, he's rarely given interviews.

What is the largest farm in the United States? ›

King Ranch, largest ranch in the United States, composed of a group of four tracts of land in southeastern Texas, totaling approximately 825,000 acres (333,800 hectares).

Who is the richest farmer in America? ›

Stewart Allen Resnick (born December 24, 1936) is an American billionaire businessman. In 2018, Resnick was the wealthiest farmer in the United States.

Who owns the largest almond farm in California? ›

The Resnicks own more than 30,000 acres of almond orchards and 50,000 acres of pistachio orchards in California's Central Valley. The Wonderful Co. The water that the Resnicks use gets stored underground initially before the water is delivered to the roots of the Resnicks' pistachios, almonds and pomegranate orchards.

What is The Wonderful Company controversy? ›

The Wonderful Company has been criticized for its excessive consumption of water in the state of California.

Who owns Wonderful Nuts? ›

Making the world a better place, one brand at a time

The Wonderful Company was founded by entrepreneurs Stewart and Lynda Resnick.

Who owns most water in California? ›

The majority owners, the Resnicks, are worth at least 8 billion. How were they able to take over such a large percentage of what should be a shared public resource?

How much is an acre of pistachios worth? ›

Based on closed sales from 2020, pistachios in Fresno and Madera counties sold for $17,000-$40,000 an acre on strong demand and increased value. Kern pistachio orchards traded hands for $30,000 to $48,000 on strong demand and a value trend said to be stable to climbing.

Why do billionaires buy ranches? ›

It's a strategy for financial security and resilience. Agricultural land is an asset class that yields strong returns, stays stable in the face of market turbulence and adds a unique layer of diversification. And it's a signpost indicating where strategic investors might want to set their sights next.

Who owns the most farmland in USA? ›

The Land Report 100 research team analyzes transactions and scours records to determine America's leading landowners. That's how we broke the news in 2020 that Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates was America's largest farmland owner with more than 260,000 acres.

What almost 90% of U.S. farms are owned by? ›

As of 2020, 98% of the farms in the US are family-run, meaning most of the business is owned by the operator and their relatives. Small family farms accounted for 89% of all US farms.

Who is the richest farmer in the world? ›

Qin Yinglin (Chinese: 秦英林; pinyin: Qín Yīnglín, born 1965) is a Chinese agriculture tycoon, billionaire, Communist Party member, and the world's richest farmer. He is the chair and president of the pig farming company Muyuan Foodstuff and is one of the richest people in China. According to Bloomberg Billionaires Index, ...

Who owns most of the farms in America? ›

People own most farmland. Some 2.6 million owners are individuals or families, and they own more than two thirds of all farm acreage. Fewer than 32,500 non family held corpor ations own farmland, and they own less than 5 percent of all U.S. farmland.

Who won the national best farmer? ›

01, GNA – Madam Charity Akortia, 57, has been adjudged the 2023 Overall National Best Farmer at the 39th National Farmers' Day Celebration, held at Tarkwa, in the Western Region. The winner, a mixed farmer in the Agona West District of the Central Region, received one million Ghana Cedis as her prize.

Which president was a farmer? ›

George Washington

Our first president was a man of many talents: military leader, surveyor, politician. He was also an innovative farmer. He experimented with new crops and fertilizers, crop rotation and livestock breeding. He introduced grain farming and flour milling to his family plantation.

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