California

Blue Diamond to close historic plant and move operations to Turlock, Salida

Virginia Shanahan, left, Stephanie Gomez, right, and Francis Mankin, second from right, sort almonds along with other workers at Blue Diamond Almonds in Sacramento in 2011. On Friday, June 6, 2025, Blue Diamond officials announced it would shutter its historic midtown facility, shifting jobs to other plants in the Central Valley.
Virginia Shanahan, left, Stephanie Gomez, right, and Francis Mankin, second from right, sort almonds along with other workers at Blue Diamond Almonds in Sacramento in 2011. On Friday, June 6, 2025, Blue Diamond officials announced it would shutter its historic midtown facility, shifting jobs to other plants in the Central Valley. Sacramento Bee file

Blue Diamond Growers, the Sacramento-based almond cooperative, plans to wind down operations at its historic midtown plant and transfer most manufacturing to sites in Turlock and Salida over the next two years.

The company said the move would bring manufacturing closer to many of its farmers and members, and running those operations out of the C Street facility — a landmark in Sacramento for more than a century — has become inefficient.

“Our Sacramento team’s work ethic and incredible drive have enabled us to build Blue Diamond into what it is today,” President and CEO Kai Bockmann said in a statement. “However, the challenges of running a plant from these historical buildings has become too costly and inefficient. Streamlining our manufacturing plants is the right business move to further strengthen our market-leading position and bring increased value to our grower members.”

Blue Diamond, one of the state’s most visible agricultural entities, has historically played a central role in the almond industry, a sector deeply intertwined with California’s economy and water use. Its midtown facility has long symbolized Sacramento’s agricultural legacy, anchoring the city’s transition from a rail and river hub to a center for food processing and trade.

The company said Bockmann met with plant workers Friday morning. Around 600 workers will be affected. The reductions will happen in phases over the next 18 to 24 months. Later this year, around 10% of plant employees will be cut.

“Even though most employees will not leave this year, we want to be transparent and tell our people as soon as possible,” Bockmann said in the statement.

Workers sort almonds at the Blue Diamond Growers almond plant in Sacramento in 2011. Blue Diamond Growers announced it will shut its midtown Sacramento plant, moving operations to Turlock & Salida. Around 600 jobs will be affected in next two years.
Workers sort almonds at the Blue Diamond Growers almond plant in Sacramento in 2011. Blue Diamond Growers announced it will shut its midtown Sacramento plant, moving operations to Turlock & Salida. Around 600 jobs will be affected in next two years. Lezlie Sterling Sacramento Bee file

The company will offer incentives for employees who remain during the transition, and provide severance for those whose positions are cut. Some will be offered positions at other sites.

The company’s corporate office will remain in Sacramento, officials said.

“Thank you, Blue Diamond, for 115 years of partnership,” Sacramento Mayor Kevin McCarty said in a statement Friday. “Blue Diamond has been an iconic symbol of Sacramento’s history in the agricultural manufacturing industry. We wish you well as you relocate to the Central Valley and commend your care in supporting your workers through this transition.”

McCarty also said that the city looks forward to a new chapter for the 53-acre midtown site, not far from the Railyards development.

“The Blue Diamond factory is primed for new life and new opportunity for our city,” he said.

A building at the Blue Diamond almond plant in Sacramento suffered damage in 2019 after a four-alarm fire sparked on the factory’s second floor. The cooperative said on Friday, June 6, 2025, that it would close the facility on 53 acres in midtown, shifting some jobs to other Central Valley locations.
A building at the Blue Diamond almond plant in Sacramento suffered damage in 2019 after a four-alarm fire sparked on the factory’s second floor. The cooperative said on Friday, June 6, 2025, that it would close the facility on 53 acres in midtown, shifting some jobs to other Central Valley locations. HECTOR AMEZUCA Sacramento Bee file

The decision to exit Sacramento almost entirely comes as the 115-year-old cooperative emerges from two consecutive years of financial pressure. Revenues remained flat at $1.3 billion for the fiscal year ending in August 2024, down 17% from 2022. However, the cooperative recently saw a modest rise in income to $711 million, up from $640 million the previous year, driven by cost-cutting efforts that included the elimination of 38 corporate positions in the spring.

Despite financial strain industry-wide — attributed to pandemic-related supply chain disruptions and a prolonged surplus — Blue Diamond has continued to expand internationally. Over the past two years, it has established new distribution in the Middle East, added products in Europe and increased its market share in Canada — a strategic push to stabilize demand and reduce exposure to price volatility.

The international expansion has come as California’s almond acreage has declined in recent years, pressured by rising interest rates and tightening water resources. Late last year, the U.S. Department of Agriculture forecast a stronger harvest this August through October, and global demand remains steady with almond inventories significantly reduced from pandemic highs.

Steve Van Duyn, Blue Diamond’s board chair, said in November the cooperative “fought for its members by tapping into every opportunity to strengthen our portfolio and increase demand,” pointing to the company’s resilience amid economic headwinds.

The Bee’s Mathew Miranda, Daniel Hunt and Sean Campbell contributed to this story.

This story was originally published June 6, 2025 at 11:56 AM with the headline "Blue Diamond to close historic plant and move operations to Turlock, Salida."

Annika Merrilees
The Sacramento Bee
Annika Merrilees is a business reporter for The Sacramento Bee. She previously spent five years covering business and health care for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
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