F. William Engdahl
NEO
The USA is by a wide
margin the world largest soybean producer with 34 percent of the world’s
soybean production and 42% of world exports prior to the China trade
battles. The US is also the world largest corn or maize producer, almost
double China, the number two. A serious harvest failure in these two
crops could significantly affect world food prices, leaving aside the
unfortunate fact that almost all US soybeans and corn are GMO crops.
They are mainly used in animal feed.
A major factor in the disruption of the US Midwest growing season is the fact that the past 12 months have seen the greatest precipitation levels since the US Government began keeping statistics in 1895, according to the US NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information. Record snowfall followed by abnormally heavy rains are the reason.
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NEO
No, this is not at
all an endorsement of the apocalyptic scenarios of AOC or that famous
young Swedish climate expert, Greta. It is, however, a look at unusual
weather disasters in several key growing regions from the USA to
Australia, the Philippines and beyond that could dramatically affect
food availability and prices in the coming year. That in turn could have
major political implications depending on how the rest of the growing
season develops.
USA Midwest Waterlogged
According to the
latest May 20 report of the National Agricultural Statistics Service
(NASS) of the US Department of Agriculture, corn and soybean crops are
well behind the planting growth levels normal this time of the planting
season. They report that only 49% of all planned corn acreage in the US
has been planted compared with 78% at this time a year ago. Of that only
19% has yet emerged from the ground compared to 47% in May 2018. In
terms of soybeans, barely 19% of crops have yet been planted compared
with 53% a year before. Rice acreage planted is down to 73% compared to
92% a year ago in the six US rice-growing states. Of course, should weather dramatically improve the final harvest numbers could improve. It is simply too early to predict.
A major factor in the disruption of the US Midwest growing season is the fact that the past 12 months have seen the greatest precipitation levels since the US Government began keeping statistics in 1895, according to the US NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information. Record snowfall followed by abnormally heavy rains are the reason.
Read more
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