USDA: 2013 To Bring Record Combined Corn, Soybean Acreage

Determined to make up for a crop that was adversely affected by historic drought last year, U.S. farmers intend to plant a record-high combined 174.4 million acres of corn and soybeans in 2013, according to the Prospective Plantings report released March 28 by the USDA’s National Agricultural Statistics Service. If realized, corn will represent the highest planted acreage in the United States since 1936 (102 million planted acres) and for soybeans the fourth highest acreage on record.

Corn growers intend to plant 97.3 million acres in 2013, up for the fifth consecutive year, slightly higher than last year and 6% higher than in 2011.

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With expected returns for corn historically high going into 2013, producers throughout the south and the northern Great Plains intend to plant more corn.

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Record high corn acreage is expected in Arizona, Idaho, Minnesota, Nevada, North Dakota and Oregon.

Conversely, most states in the Corn Belt which experienced severe drought in 2012 expect to plant slightly less acres to corn in 2013.

The largest year-over-year decreases are expected in Illinois, Missouri and South Dakota. Iowa continues to lead the nation with 14.2 million acres of corn.

Farmers in some areas of the country remain challenged by persistent drought conditions which is limiting the amount of expected soybean acreage in some states.

Therefore, nationally 77.1 million acres of soybeans are expected to be planted, down slightly from last year but up 3% from 2011.

Compared with 2012, planting intentions are down across all of the Great Plains, with the exception of North Dakota.

The year-over-year national decrease is only 72,000 acres.

With planted area in most of the eastern Corn Belt and parts of the Southeast expected to rise, these increases nearly balance out the declines in the Great Plains.

If realized, farmers in New York, North Dakota and Pennsylvania will also set new records for planted soybean acres.

Prospective Plantings provides the first official, survey based estimates of U.S. farmers’ 2013 planting intentions.

NASS’s acreage estimates are based on surveys conducted during the first two weeks of March from a sample of more than 83,500 farm operators across the United States.

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