The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Farming communitie­s suffering

Rain has derailed planting, and the fragile rural economy feels it.

- By Bloomberg News Bloomberg News

From 100 feet up in the air, Indiana crop duster Robert Sneberger gets a better view than most of how cornfields are faring. This season, the picture is bleak.

Instead of the stretching green stalks he normally sees at this time of year, there’s water. The wettest year in memory has stalled planting and stunted crops in the Midwest at a time when farmers are already struggling with low prices and a trade war with China.

But they’re not alone. The communitie­s they live in and the businesses that supply them with seeds, fertilizer, equipment and services are struggling as credit conditions steadily deteriorat­e in a fragile rural economy. At Burrus Seed in Arenzville, Illinois, employees spend as much time trying to lift farmers’ spirits as they do selling to them, according to the owner.

“If we experience­d a year like this, I don’t remember it,” said Todd Burrus, whose family has run the company since 1935. “When the farm economy is tough, it’s going to be tough for all the suppliers.”

Another Illinois seed business owner, Kurt Barman, says he’s trying not to curtail employee hours even as customers are returning product because they aren’t able to plant. “All of the seeds are coming back, so that’s lost revenue for us,” he said.

The wet weather is presenting farmers with other purchasing dilemmas. Growers are weighing whether to trade up to the latest technology to protect crops and businesses, or use prior versions, according to Mark Patrick, chief financial officer of agro-chemical giant Syngenta.

“Couple that with less acres, you’ve got a very acute pressure going on at the moment,” Patrick said in an interview with Bloomberg Television.

The fertilizer business is already feeling the effects. Midwest urea premiums have been running at more than double normal levels. While that’s good news for suppliers, the reason behind the price surge isn’t.

With the Mississipp­i River closed for much of the past month, the regular flow of crop-nutrient shipments has been disrupted with barges stacked up waiting to move, according to Alexis Maxwell, research director for Bloomberg Green Markets.

Deerfield, Illinois-based CF Industries Holdings Inc. produces urea locally, while Nutrien has urea it can bring in from the Canadian Prairies. Overseas providers have been the ones suffering as they try to get their product to the Midwest.

The deluge is just the latest blow to the farm economy. Even the $28 billion in promised tariff aid may not be enough to rescue rural America from the onslaught of bad news.

There’s been a steady deteriorat­ion in agricultur­al credit conditions, the Kansas City Federal Reserve said in its May report. Farmer sentiment has plunged to levels not seen since October 2016, the month before Donald Trump’s election victory, a Purdue University/CME Group index showed this month. Net farm income last year was about half of the $123 billion earned in 2013.

The stalled planting this year only works to exacerbate fragility in rural areas, said Curt Hudnutt, head of North American rural banking for Rabobank. “If you want to liken it to the 2008 recession from a housing perspectiv­e, it’s similar to that and it’s really vulnerable to any disruption­s,” he said.

Shawn Kelly, mayor of Missouri Valley, Iowa, says the weather is casting a shadow over the corn-driven local economy, where average incomes are already well below the national average.

“Any time you have a big economic impact from agricultur­e like that where people can’t get their crops in, there’s going to be less money for people to spend,” Mayor Kelly said.

The reason for this year’s production problem is all too apparent for Sneberger, whose company Aerial Farmer sprays fertilizer­s and pesticides: “I was just flying over the fields yesterday and I was completely depressed.”

Craig Woodley, a pilot who owns Woodley Aerial Spray in Walnut, Illinois, said he’s trying to figure out how to save money, since he’s still not sure how busy he’ll be this summer.

“It’s a scary picture,” Woodley said. “There’s definitely going to be a lot of lives affected.”

 ?? DANIEL ACKER / BLOOMBERG ?? Farmland stands flooded in Malden, Illinois, in May. “When the farm economy is tough, it’s going to be tough for all the suppliers,” said Todd Burrus of Burris Seed in Arenzville, Illinois.
DANIEL ACKER / BLOOMBERG Farmland stands flooded in Malden, Illinois, in May. “When the farm economy is tough, it’s going to be tough for all the suppliers,” said Todd Burrus of Burris Seed in Arenzville, Illinois.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States