Drought worsens in Midwest
ST. LOUIS The worst drought in decades in the U.S. is showing no sign of letting up in several key Midwest farming states, worrying farmers harvesting the summer’s withered corn crop that their winter crops may also be at risk.
Overall drought conditions in the majority of the United States held steady over the seven-day period ending Tuesday, with about one-fifth of the total land area in extreme or exceptional drought, the two worst classifications, the U.S. Drought Monitor showed in the weekly update of its drought map, released Thursday.
Conditions worsened, though, in Kansas and Iowa, the nation’s biggest corn producer, and nearly 98 per cent of Nebraska was still deemed to be in one of the two worst categories.
The unrelenting dryness won’t have much effect on the region’s corn and soybean crops, which are already being plucked from the fields. But it could hurt other crops, such as winter wheat.
The map, which is put out by the National Drought Mitigation Center at the University of Nebraska in Lincoln, shows 75 per cent of Iowa is enduring extreme or exceptional drought. That’s up roughly 10 percentage points from the previous week.
Just over 93.25 per cent of Kansas was in the same predicament, which was an increase of roughly five percentage points.
As of Monday, 54 per cent of the corn crop had been brought in from the fields — the fastest pace in at least 17 years, due to early planting and nearly three times the previous fiveyear average of 20 per cent by this time, the U.S. Department of Agriculture reported. Some 56 per cent of the corn crop in Iowa has been harvested, and Illinois has brought in 71 per cent and Missouri 88 per cent.
Half of the U.S. corn crop is classified as being in poor or very poor shape, essentially unchanged from a week earlier, the USDA said. A year ago, 20 per cent of corn in the fields was listed that way.
Forty-one per cent of the U.S. soybean crops have been harvested — double the pace of the average of the previous half decade — with one-third considered poor or very poor, the USDA said.
The USDA reported Monday that emergence of winter wheat was lagging, given the extremely dry conditions, which could keep that rotational crop from properly germinating. Just five per cent of that crop had emerged in South Dakota, down sharply from 32 per cent over the previous five years. Similar issues were reported in Nebraska, Colorado, Montana and Oregon.