Miller Magazine Issue: 113 May 2019

41 NEWS MAY 2019 USDA won’t survey for volume of grain lost to March floods The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s statistical arm will not collect data on the volume of harves- ted grain lost when farms from the Dakotas to Mis- souri were hit by flooding in March that burst grain storage bins, a government official said. However, figures in USDA’s regular quarterly stocks report for June will reflect losses due to flooding as well as from more typical usage by processors, expor- ters and livestock feeders over the preceding three months. “As of right now we don’t have any inten- tion of collecting anything on grain that was lost,” Lance Honig, crops branch chief of USDA’s National Agricultural Statistics Service, said at a meeting in Chicago for USDA data users. USDA is scheduled to release its next quarterly stocks report on June 28. “The stocks report will reflect (grain) inventories as of June first, so any losses that occurred will no longer be represented in the stocks at that time,” Honig said, adding that surveying for the amount of grain lost to flooding “would be a challenge.” At least one million acres of U.S. farmland were flooded after a “bomb cyclone” storm left wide swaths of nine major grain-producing states under water in March, satellite data analyzed by Gro In- telligence for Reuters showed. Indigo Ag, an agri- culture technology company, identified 832 on- farm storage bins within flooded Midwest areas. The bins hold an estimated five million to 10 milli- on bushels of corn and soybeans – worth between US$17.3 million and US$34.6 million – that could have been damaged in the floods, the company told Reuters. REUTERS

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