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One industry's collapse creates uncertainty for US farmers and within the food chain

By John Roach, AccuWeather staff writer

Published Apr 24, 2020 3:35 PM EST

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As the demand for certain produce declines in the U.S., some farmers are being forced to destroy their crops instead of harvesting them.

The uncertainties for the American farmer are adding up faster than sales of face masks. 

There’s the COVID-19 pandemic, of course, as well as what it may mean for the availability of vital field and back-office farm workers. The pandemic has also led to plummeting demand for produce, leading some farmers to destroy crops and dump milk. 

Crude oil prices that dropped in a head-spinning manner have led to the latest challenge for farmers. Since fuel consumption has nose-dived because of COVID-19, there is now an historic decline in U.S. ethanol production – a key for corn-growing farmers since roughly 40 percent of corn grown is used for ethanol. 

All of this has occurred at the start of planting season in several key corn-growing states, leading farmers to piece together all of the ever-changing elements and decide how much corn they should plant this season – versus soybeans or other commodities – and how much of their products will be delivered come harvest time. 

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None of that even includes how farmers have to account for the key role of weather. 

“Weather is not as great a factor as it sometimes is because of those other things that aren’t normally in play,” said AccuWeather senior meteorologist Dave Samuhel. 

U.S. ethanol production has fallen off the charts; production declined 48 percent in just more than three months, from the fourth-highest all-time figure on Jan. 1 (1.095 million barrels per day) down to an all-time low (563 million barrels per day) on April 17. 

Of the roughly 200 U.S. ethanol plants, 73 have been completely shut down, 71 others have significantly reduced output rates, leaving just 60 plants near normal operating rates, according to Geoff Cooper, president and CEO of the Renewable Fuels Association (RFA). Cooper estimates the ethanol industry could suffer $10 billion in losses due to COVID-19.

“Roughly half of the ethanol industry is shut down today, as fuel demand has collapsed in response to COVID-19, and it is clear we have a long and bumpy road to recovery ahead of us,” Cooper said in a news release. “Corn demand and prices have plummeted as plants have idled, jobs are being lost, and rural communities are being destabilized.” 

“It’s more uncertainty in farmers’ minds as they’re going through the planting process,” said AccuWeather’s Samuhel. “Is there going to be demand for my corn if the ethanol plants are closed?” 

The ethanol industry also is facing the same dilemma as the oil industry because of the greatly reduced demand. “I don’t know if they’re going to run out of storage space,” said AccuWeather commodities consultant Jim Candor. “The amount that’s in storage is at an all-time high. Like oil, are they going to run out of places to put it? Are they going to pay people to store it?”

Ethanol train cars wait outside the Southwest Iowa Renewable Energy plant, an ethanol producer, in Council Bluffs, Iowa, Tuesday, April 21, 2020. The ethanol industry is under pressure after low oil prices and a coronavirus-related decline in travel cause demand for the fuel to plummet. (AP Photo/Nati Harnik)

The uncertainties could lead to changes in what farmers plant, said Calvin Haile, co-owner of Haile Farm in Dunnsville, Virginia. “I’m sure some acres will shift from corn to soybeans at some point,” he told AccuWeather. “The midwestern states have most of the control of that mix – in particular Illinois, Iowa and Indiana have the most influence…. There are a lot of variables still in play that could influence the acres.”

The USDA World Agricultural Supply and Demand Estimates are due May 12, which should indicate farmers’ intentions for the 2020 season. Meanwhile, farmers can look to the sky for better news. 

“Farmers are pretty happy this week with the weather,” said Samuhel. “We’re getting off to a reasonable start; it’s not good everywhere, but in some areas, people are happy. 

“The first full week in May looks like it may be pretty favorable,” he added. “There could be some rainfall in the south-central U.S., but if it’s south of the Midwest, which the models are suggesting, then that would favor corn and soybean planting in the Midwest and it would favor the wheat crop in the southern Central Plains.” 

Keep checking back on AccuWeather.com and stay tuned to the AccuWeather Network on DirecTV, Frontier and Verizon Fios. 

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