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http://blogs.desmoinesregister.com/dmr/index.php/2012/07/05/drought-widens-in-iowa-midwest/Drought widens, corn and soybean prices up again
7:38 AM, Jul 5, 2012 | by Dan Piller | Comments Categories: Green Fields: Agriculture and Alternative Energy
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Latest drought map for Iowa shows drought extending further into eastern Iowa
A new drought condition map showing widened coverage of the 2012 drought across the Corn Belt sent corn prices near $7 per bushel and soybeans near $15 when trading began on the Chicago Board of Trade after the holiday hiatus.
Corn opened up 19 cents per bushel to $6.94 for the December contract covering this year’s crop. That price is a full $1.75 above corn prices in early June.
Soybeans for the new crop November crop was up 37 cents per bushel to $15.14 at noon, extending what is already an all-time high for the November contract.
Iowa is the nation’s largest producer of both corn and soybeans. In 2011 the two crops put $20 billion in cash into Iowa’s economy.
The latest U.S. Drought Monitor map shows increased drought conditions through eastern and far northwest Iowa, while virtually all of the important corn-growing states of Illinois and Indiana remain classified as in drought conditions.
The latest Iowa map extends drought conditions from central Iowa to cover the regions around Waterloo and Cedar Rapids to Dubuque, while maintaining drought conditions in an S-shaped curve through central Iowa from the Missouri to Minnesota borders.
Key corn-growing states of Iowa, Illinois, Missouri and Indiana are at the center of the drought
Also, a portion of northwest Iowa north of Sioux City has been added to the abnormally dry condition category.
That dryness in far northwest Iowa now extends into the important corn-producing region of southern Minnesota, which until now has been spared the harshest effects of the dry summer.
A portion of Iowa from the Missouri River eastward through two tiers of counties is still considered to have adequate moisture.
Iowa’s rainfall totals in May and June were less than half of normal, and the last appreciable rainfall in the state occurred last Friday when much of central and eastern Iowa received from one-half to two inches of rain.
Meanwhile Iowa has been baked by temperatures of 100 degrees or more, which evaporates moisture from the soil at the rate of three-tenths of an inch per day, according to state climatologist Harry Hillaker.
Corn prices have risen $1.65 per bushel to a nine-month high on concerns that the drought will hamper pollination, which usually happens in early to mid-July. Soybean prices reached a four-year high for the November contract last week on similar concerns.
Bryce Knorr of Farm Futures Magazine said this morning “triple digit heat will cover much of the heart of the Corn Belt again today, with only partial relief in sight. While temperatures will slowly cool from the northwest, only limited chances for rain are in sign for key states over the next week.”
Tomm Pfitzenmaier of Summit Commodities in Des Moines said “there is little doubt that the weather over the past two or three days took a heavy toll on the corn crop and especially for those that have been missing key rains over the past couple of weeks. The crop condition rating due out next Monday is bound to show additional decline in the good/excellent category.”
For the Midwest portion of the U.S. Drought Monitor, click here.
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