Houston Chronicle

Demand for grains takes acreage from cotton production

- By Marvin G. Perez

Cotton’s abundance is under threat for the world’s largest supplier.

U.S. cotton plantings are expected to fall as soaring Chinese demand for grains tempts growers to swap crops while drought undermines the fiber’s prospects in the top producing state of Texas. The potential decline for the world’s largest cotton exporter comes despite 10 straight months of price gains in the fiber’s longest rally since 1973.

U.S. farmers are forecast to sow 11.5 million acres for the season starting Aug. 1, down about 5 percent from the prior year, according to median estimates of nine analysts surveyed by Bloomberg. The U.S. produced 25 percent less cotton last year after bad weather cut yields and more growers opted to skip the harvest.

The prospect of less American cotton means tighter supplies in a period of pent up global demand for textiles fueled by China’s desire to boost reserves of the fiber. World cotton consumptio­n is expected to surge 13 percent this year in what would be the biggest increase in at least 60 years, according to

U.S. Department of Agricultur­e data.

The USDA and National Cotton Council will release their initial projection­s for plantings in February.

The number “is a moving target,” said Peter Egli, the Chicago-based director for Plexus Cotton Ltd, who expects a drop to 11 million acres. He’s pinning the uncertaint­y on heightened demand for other crops. China’s insatiable appetite has sent grains including soy and corn to multi-year highs, eclipsing cotton’s rebound.

The grains “are stealing acreage,” Egli said. “There’s a lot of interest in those crops.”

Cotton will lose ground to corn, soybeans and possibly even peanuts in the Mississipp­i Delta and Southeast U.S., said John Robinson, economist at Texas A&M’s AgriLife Extension in College Station.

“Perhaps the same is true in the regions of the Texas Panhandle and Kansas,” Robinson said, noting that some growers in the Midwest state who recently started planting cotton may go back to grains.

Not everyone expects a drop, and global stockpiles remain ample. Rabobank Internatio­nal analyst Charles Clack forecasts a 2

percent increase, though he said his projection may be revised downward. The price “will need to provide enough incentive to prevent a major decline,” he said in a Jan. 21 report.

China, the world’s top importer, is increasing purchases of American supplies to meet trade commitment­s as it faces pressure to diversify its sourcing to avoid an internatio­nal consumer backlash over its labor practices.

The U.S. in January banned imports of cotton products from China’s topgrowing province, Xinjiang, over alleged ill-treatment of its ethnic Uighur Muslim minority. The province accounts for about 85 percent of the country’s

output. The U.S. imported $9 billion of cotton products in the past year from China.

China’s workaround could involve using more imported cotton for textiles it sends overseas, according to O.A. Cleveland, an agricultur­al economics professor at Mississipp­i State University. Because of large subsidies given to growers, especially in Xinjiang, China’s cotton prices exceed those in internatio­nal markets, making imported fiber far cheaper.

“Chinese-grown cotton will be used for the domestic consumer,” he said. “China will import more foreign cotton to build a larger textile/apparel manufactur­ing industry.”

 ?? Jim Watkins / Associated Press file photo ?? World cotton consumptio­n is expected to surge 13 percent, the biggest increase in 60 years, USDA says.
Jim Watkins / Associated Press file photo World cotton consumptio­n is expected to surge 13 percent, the biggest increase in 60 years, USDA says.

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