America’s breadbasket is baking to a
crisp – and the combination of extreme heat and expansive drought is
likely to continue well into early August, further damaging corn and
soybean crops that have already been severely compromised – and
almost certainly pushing prices up higher.
In the last five weeks, U.S. corn prices have surged more than 55
percent as crops continue to bake in the worst drought in the Midwest in
more than 50 years, Reuters reported Friday. The scorching conditions will
cause further damage to crops that already have been nearly decimated in
some Midwest areas.
On Friday corn and soybeans rose to record highs, extending the biggest
gains in two-and-a-half years.
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Dustbowl
Though some rain fell over the past few days in about a third of the
Midwest, the week ahead "will be dry and very hot (in St. Louis),
with temperatures in the 100s (degrees Fahrenheit), reaching 106 on
Wednesday," meteorologist Don Keeney told Reuters on Friday. That
same hot weather is predicted for the bulk of the central and western
Midwest.
On Monday, the government is scheduled to release an updated weekly crop
progress report – with many holding their breath.
"We’ve had weeks and weeks of below-normal rainfall and
super-high temperatures – high 90s and triple digits – in
areas where we never see those temperatures this early in the year,"
Jeff Caldwell, an editor at Successful Farming in
Des Moines, Iowa, told The Fiscal Times on Thursday. "The corn
and soybean crops are really hurting. With corn, a lot of areas require a
good amount of moisture during the pollination period, and in a number of
fields, pollination did occur – but it took place after such dire
conditions that a lot of farmers are saying they may have no crop. Many
cornfields have stalks with no ears on them at all."
With higher food prices and shipping costs an increasing threat –
as well as lower revenues in those areas of the Midwest that rely on
all-important summer tourism dollars –The Fiscal Times honed
in on some of the key numbers connected with this latest episode of extreme weather:
$8.245 a bushel
Price of corn for September
delivery, as of Friday afternoon – up 16.75 cents, the second
straight day of record highs
$17.575 a bushel
Price of August soybeans,
as of Friday afternoon – up 23.75 cents, the third straight
record-setting day
1,300 in 29 states
Number of counties
declared federal disaster areas due to the drought, allowing farmers to
apply for low-interest loans
55 percent
Percentage of continental U.S.
that experienced moderate to extreme drought in the month of June
88 percent
Current percentage of corn
crops in drought-stricken regions of the U.S.
87 percent
Current percentage of soybean
crops in drought-stricken regions of the U.S.
38 percent
Percentage of nation’s
corn crop in poor to very poor condition, as of the week ending July 15
– compared to 30 percent the week before
30 percent
Percentage of soybeans in poor
to very poor condition, in same period – compared to 27 percent the
week before
54 percent
Percentage of pasture and
rangeland in poor or very poor condition, a jump of 4 percent compared to
last week – and an all-time high for the 1995-2012 growing season's
weekly history
117
Number of wildfires that have burned in
the MarkTwain National Forest in Missouri, as a result of the drought
– a record-setting pace
110
Number of days worth of water that
officials in Augusta, Kansas, say is currently available to them via
reservoir
Sources: USDA,
National Weather Service, Reuters, The New York Times