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Purveyor

(29,876 posts)
Wed Jun 27, 2012, 11:11 AM Jun 2012

Heat Wave Wilts Corn as Supplies Diminish Most Since 1996

Source: Bloomberg

Corn supplies in the U.S., the world’s biggest exporter, are declining at the fastest pace since 1996 just as a Midwest heat wave damages the world’s largest harvest for a third consecutive year.

Stockpiles were probably 3.168 billion bushels (80.47 million metric tons) on June 1, 47 percent less than on March 1, the average of 22 analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg shows. The worst Midwest drought in more than a decade is wilting a harvest that the U.S. Department of Agriculture says will be the biggest ever. The agency updates its inventory estimate June 29 and its production forecast two weeks later.

Futures surged 25 percent since reaching a 20-month low June 15, and Morgan Stanley expects prices to advance another 10 percent to $7 a bushel in two months if the drought persists. The rally is boosting global food costs that the United Nations estimates dropped 14 percent from a record in February 2011 and widening losses for ethanol producers including Decatur, Illinois-based Archer Daniels Midland Co.

“We have a potential disaster developing for the U.S. corn supply,” said Peter Meyer, the senior director for agricultural commodities at PIRA Energy Group in New York who cut his corn- crop forecast after surveying fields in Illinois, Indiana and Ohio last week. “This year may be the worst yet.”

Read more: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-06-26/heat-wave-wilts-corn-as-supply-drops-most-since-96-commodities.html

26 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Heat Wave Wilts Corn as Supplies Diminish Most Since 1996 (Original Post) Purveyor Jun 2012 OP
GMO does not produce higher yields lovuian Jun 2012 #1
That's true because organic corn doesn't require water 4th law of robotics Jun 2012 #3
What in the world are you talking about? murielm99 Jun 2012 #4
I was replying to the post 4th law of robotics Jun 2012 #5
First it was the unusually warm March that prompted the fruit trees to blossom too early only to get Purveyor Jun 2012 #8
It's bright red, tart, cooking cherries that will be mostly unavailable. amandabeech Jun 2012 #22
Even corn specifically engineered to resist drought isn't up to par against global warming NickB79 Jun 2012 #9
News flash......climate change is happening..... Swede Atlanta Jun 2012 #2
Why should he care... orwell Jun 2012 #7
The corn plants around here have been curled up for several madmom Jun 2012 #6
This whole year has been scary, weatherwise. AngryOldDem Jun 2012 #11
The corn looks great up here in Minnesota NickB79 Jun 2012 #10
Exactly. AngryOldDem Jun 2012 #12
I'm just waiting for the exodus from Texas and Oklahoma NickB79 Jun 2012 #15
Isn't the southwest getting low on water too? AngryOldDem Jun 2012 #21
Oh, and while it's dry down south, we just got 12" of rain in one week NickB79 Jun 2012 #16
Kicked and recommended. Uncle Joe Jun 2012 #13
These early heat waves are catching the corn at its most vulnerable stage - when it is young and jwirr Jun 2012 #14
Mid-June FAS grain report had global production increasing by 76 million tonnes this year OnlinePoker Jun 2012 #17
We were told. aquart Jun 2012 #18
106 degrees Fahrenheit yesterday Rain Mcloud Jun 2012 #19
We sold are excess corn to China (Don't worry) lovuian Jun 2012 #20
This is really bad news. cliss Jun 2012 #23
It is about time we stopped using corn Smilo Jun 2012 #24
Probably gonna generate some "looks." RUMMYisFROSTED Jun 2012 #25
Rex Tillerson says your fear is overblown pscot Jun 2012 #26

lovuian

(19,362 posts)
1. GMO does not produce higher yields
Wed Jun 27, 2012, 11:16 AM
Jun 2012

it produces LOWER YIELDS

it is the greatest failure of genetic engineering

murielm99

(30,790 posts)
4. What in the world are you talking about?
Wed Jun 27, 2012, 11:39 AM
Jun 2012

Do you farm? We do, in the Midwest. We are in the middle of a drought, and expecting triple digit temperatures this week. This will impact our livelihood for several seasons. People here are really hurting.

 

4th law of robotics

(6,801 posts)
5. I was replying to the post
Wed Jun 27, 2012, 11:41 AM
Jun 2012

that linked this to lower yields due to GM.

Obviously it's the lack of water and surplus of heat. Not the dreaded genes that that poster fears.


This will impact our livelihood for several seasons. People here are really hurting.


Never said otherwise.
 

Purveyor

(29,876 posts)
8. First it was the unusually warm March that prompted the fruit trees to blossom too early only to get
Wed Jun 27, 2012, 11:49 AM
Jun 2012

hit with several killing frosts. Cherry crop is all but wiped out. Apples, peaches, etc all seriously reduced.

Now, the bean and corn fields are scorching. Not looking good around here but I know there are areas much worse off than us...for now.

100 degrees tomorrow and straight upper 90's for the following days with just a scant 20% chance of pop-up showers.

Hang in there, it is going to be tough.

Godspeed.

 

amandabeech

(9,893 posts)
22. It's bright red, tart, cooking cherries that will be mostly unavailable.
Wed Jun 27, 2012, 02:06 PM
Jun 2012

I just spent 6 weeks in the second most important tart cherry producing county in Michigan, which is Number One in tart cherries for pies, pastry and cheese cake topping. In my county, orchards on the highest ground do have some cherries, but harvesting them is expensive, and I'm not sure that many will be picked or shaken.

Most areas receive their dark red sweet eating cherries from Washington state. To my knowledge, the west coast crop of sweet cherries is fine.

Apples, peaches and plums in Michigan ( and probably upstate New York) are down probably 70-80%. One of the processors in my county has contracts with McDonalds to produce those little packets of apples. He can only use three varieties of apples for the McD's product, and I have no idea where those are coming from.

Blueberries and strawberries were relatively unaffected, as were the other vegetable crops, field corn and hay. Michigan blueberries will be in your stores about 3 weeks early, however.

It has been very dry, but last week a series of fronts brought some rain. A few farmers have irrigation equipment, and there is plenty of ground and surface water for their use.

By the way, Michigan resort areas are as beautiful as ever! Temperatures in the Upper Peninsula, Northern Lower Peninsula and along the Lake Michigan shoreline from north to south are cooler than most places in the Midwest. The higher temps will mean that lakes, including Lake Michigan, will reach swimming temps earlier than usual. Those Pure Michigan commercials are for real! Come on up! The blueberries will be waiting.

NickB79

(19,301 posts)
9. Even corn specifically engineered to resist drought isn't up to par against global warming
Wed Jun 27, 2012, 11:52 AM
Jun 2012

For example: http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/06/05/corn-monsanto-idUSL1E8H4JMW20120605

June 5 (Reuters) - New genetically altered corn aimed at helping farmers deal with drought offers more hype than help over the long term, according to a report issued on Tu esday by a science and environmental advocacy group.

The Union for Concerned Scientists (UCS) said the only genetically altered corn approved by regulators and undergoing field trials in the United States has no improved water efficiency, and provides only modest results in only moderate drought conditions.


The problem is actually two-fold. Even if a corn plant survives droughts, these heatwaves that are becoming more and more frequent are having a major detrimental impact on pollination. So, you could theoretically have a field of nice-looking but cobless corn that's only good to be chopped for silage feed.

We're going to have a hell of a time feeding the global population in the coming years. The future we all feared, the one climate scientists warned us about, is here
 

Swede Atlanta

(3,596 posts)
2. News flash......climate change is happening.....
Wed Jun 27, 2012, 11:28 AM
Jun 2012

I guess Senator Inhoffe (R-OK) doesn't follow what is happening to crops in his state. Another head in the sand. The sooner he is off to retirement the better.

madmom

(9,681 posts)
6. The corn plants around here have been curled up for several
Wed Jun 27, 2012, 11:43 AM
Jun 2012

weeks, with no improvement expected. Tomorrow we're supposed to hit 100* plus and the next 5 or so days, 90* plus, with no rain in sight. My poor garden looks about as bad and that's with our watering it about every other day.

AngryOldDem

(14,061 posts)
11. This whole year has been scary, weatherwise.
Wed Jun 27, 2012, 11:57 AM
Jun 2012

For the first time in my memory, there was no appreciable snow. There were thunderstorms in my area in February.

Now, we're looking at temperatures Thursday and Friday between 100 and 105, with fire danger warnings because it's also windy as hell. Most of the counties in my state have outright burning bans, and some cities have bans as well. Fireworks this year are looking like a no-go -- things are so bone dry that any spark could probably take out a whole neighborhood. No joke.

The last time I remember any kind of rain here was in late April. Now, when rain comes, it's only for a few minutes and is mere drops.

I feel so sorry for farmers. They are totally at the mercy of forces beyond their control.

And anyone who continues to deny global warming clearly has their head someplace where the blazing hot sun doesn't shine.

NickB79

(19,301 posts)
10. The corn looks great up here in Minnesota
Wed Jun 27, 2012, 11:55 AM
Jun 2012

Which once again shows how our climate zones are shifting north as global warming advances. Too bad you can't move farms much further north into Canada due to infertile, rocky soil.

Prepare to see the fabled North American bread basket shrink in the coming years as it becomes too hot to sustain today's commercial agriculture in it's southern portions.

NickB79

(19,301 posts)
15. I'm just waiting for the exodus from Texas and Oklahoma
Wed Jun 27, 2012, 12:29 PM
Jun 2012

A new wave of Okies fleeing the next Dust Bowl as the water supplies falter. The Ogallalla aquifer is already plummeting in many areas where it's been pumped for decades. If water supplies are truly the oil of the 21st century, as many have been saying, we're gonna have a population boom up here in the upper Midwest. Not sure if that's a good thing or a bad thing though.

AngryOldDem

(14,061 posts)
21. Isn't the southwest getting low on water too?
Wed Jun 27, 2012, 01:43 PM
Jun 2012

We've had a population boom there, not to mention California's demand for water. And it wasn't that long ago that Georgia and Tennessee were in a water war, at least in the courts. And I agree with your Dust Bowl scenario -- and it will be much worse than that of the '30s.

This whole situation is sort of like a sci-fi "Grapes of Wrath." And I really, really don't want to see how this all plays out.

NickB79

(19,301 posts)
16. Oh, and while it's dry down south, we just got 12" of rain in one week
Wed Jun 27, 2012, 12:34 PM
Jun 2012

There was a lake in my front yard and a foot of water in my basement (this 30 miles south of Minneapolis/St. Paul). The city of Duluth was almost swept into Lake Superior by a once-in-a-century storm event. An escaped seal from the zoo was found swimming it's way across a highway.

All this after the driest fall on record, one of the least-snowiest winters ever, and the warmest spring ever recorded.

Good thing global warming is all a myth though!

jwirr

(39,215 posts)
14. These early heat waves are catching the corn at its most vulnerable stage - when it is young and
Wed Jun 27, 2012, 12:11 PM
Jun 2012

just starting. If this were later it would not be so bad. However we have been hybriding corn to fit out OLD climate for decades and now that there is a change it is not versatile enough to make the change that is needed on its own.

OnlinePoker

(5,730 posts)
17. Mid-June FAS grain report had global production increasing by 76 million tonnes this year
Wed Jun 27, 2012, 12:45 PM
Jun 2012

Global end stocks were estimated to increase by 26 million tonnes. 64 million tonnes of the production increase were expected to be from the U.S., so that estimate has been knocked on its ass.

http://www.fas.usda.gov/psdonline/circulars/grain.pdf

 

Rain Mcloud

(812 posts)
19. 106 degrees Fahrenheit yesterday
Wed Jun 27, 2012, 01:19 PM
Jun 2012

here in central Oklahoma today and expected tomorrow.
But CO2 doesn't matter it is instead plant food according to renowned pathological liar and charlatan Lord Christopher Monkton.
Hey Monkey,how is that cure for AIDS working out for You? Really?
STFU!

cliss

(10,296 posts)
23. This is really bad news.
Wed Jun 27, 2012, 04:04 PM
Jun 2012

So much of the world depends on corn, it's got to be the # 1 staple, definitely for livestock, also for ethanol production. Not to mention lots of hungry people around the world who depend on the supply.

No doubt the price of corn is going to go up dramatically, especially if other grain producing countries like Russia and others have weather problems.

Interestingly, here in Oregon the weather is just perfect for growing. I took a long drive along the Willamette Valley yesterday to have a look a the local farms. Everywhere there were crops growing, the wheat looks great. Lots of fields full of small corn plants they look just fine.

Luckily, we have not had any dry weather to speak of. In fact, it's been rainy, cold wet weather for months. For a while, we weren't sure if the tomato plants would even make it it's so cold.

La Nina weather phenomenon is behind it. Looks like we're in for a decade of cold, wet rainy weather here in the Northwest. I wish it would even out a bit.

Smilo

(1,944 posts)
24. It is about time we stopped using corn
Wed Jun 27, 2012, 08:11 PM
Jun 2012

for fuel. Ethanol is not needed and we should be using corn for food.

I would like to know how many of these farmers were planting more corn for ethanol than they were doing in the past for food.

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