USDA acreage report shows farmers staying the course

by | Jul 5, 2022 | 5 Ag Stories, News

Farmers have gotten off to a rough start this year when it comes to planting and we have been through the ringer in many forms this growing season. In turn, farmers have planted slightly less acres than last year according to the June 30 acreage report from USDA.

American Farm Bureau Federation Senior Economist Veronica Nigh says the USDA will resurvey some planted acreage, which could possibly change the data.

?USDA?s June 30 acreage report indicates that for the ?22-23 crop year, farmers planted 237.8 million acres of corn, soybeans, wheat and cotton. This is down about 700,000 acres from ?21. However, USDA has indicated that a special follow-up survey will be carried out due to the significant number of acres left to be planted per farmers? stated intentions.?

Nigh says that with the high input prices, farmers didn?t seem to change their planting decisions because of them.

?Ahead of the report?s release, much of the conversation focused on whether farmers would switch to corn despite the higher planting costs in hopes that the revenue received in the fall would be higher than soybean returns. The acreage report indicates that farmers made small shifts to plant a few more acres of corn and cotton and pulled acres from beans and wheat, but that was likely due to weather.?

The USDA NASS will collect updated data this month for crops planted in Minnesota, North Dakota, and South Dakota, where excessive rainfall has delayed planting.

?If the newly collected data justifies any changes, NASS will publish updated acreage estimates in the crop production report on August 12. There were four million acres left to be planted of corn and 15.8 million acres of soybeans left to be planted. For corn, if all four million acres are planted, that puts us slightly ahead of 2021 plantings. And if all of acres indeed got planted to soybeans, that will mean that farmers planted more than 104 million acres of soybeans, which would be an incredible 19 percent increase over 2021.?

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