US: More than 95 percent of Illinois is in a severe drought or worse, according to a national report Thursday that increased concerns about how the hot, dry summer is affecting farming.
11 views
Skip to first unread message
-Pastor-Dale-Morgan-
unread,
Jul 28, 2012, 3:26:08 AM7/28/12
Reply to author
Sign in to reply to author
Forward
Sign in to forward
Delete
You do not have permission to delete messages in this group
Copy link
Report message
Show original message
Either email addresses are anonymous for this group or you need the view member email addresses permission to view the original message
to Bible-Pro...@googlegroups.com
US: More than
95 percent of Illinois is in a severe drought or worse,
according to a national report Thursday that increased
concerns about how the hot, dry summer is affecting farming.
Dry spell, which could becomes state's worst on record, may lead
to higher food prices
More than 95 percent of Illinois is in a severe drought or worse,
according to a national report Thursday that increased concerns
about how the hot, dry summer is affecting farming.
Most of Cook County is in a moderate drought, and other parts of
the Chicago area are suffering through severe drought. But the
central and southern portions of Illinois are experiencing even
worse conditions that are classified as extreme or exceptional,
according to the National Drought Mitigation Center.
Surrounding states, especially Missouri and Indiana, have also
been hit hard, with 55.5 percent of the Midwest experiencing at
least a severe drought, compared with 45.6 percent of the country.
The drought center's new report doesn't take into account the bit
of rain the Chicago area received this week — about 0.55 inch fell
at O'Hare International Airport on Tuesday and Wednesday — but it
would take 3 inches or more to have made any significant
improvement, said drought center climatologist Brian Fuchs.
"In a lot of places in Illinois, this is the worst they remember,"
said Emerson Nafziger, a professor of crop sciences at the
University of Illinois.
About 66 percent of the state's corn crop is in poor to very poor
condition, according to a report his week from the Illinois
Department of Agriculture. In states that are major producers of
corn nationwide, about 45 percent of the corn is poor or worse,
though the total produced this year won't be known until after
September, when harvesting begins, according to the U.S.
Department of Agriculture. During the same time last year, only 14
percent of corn crops nationwide were considered poor.
"We're sitting here, watching the sky; it looks like it could
rain," Nafziger said in by telephone from near Vandalia. "People
are kind of pessimistic."
Nationally, almost 40 percent of agricultural land is experiencing
at least a severe drought, which makes the 2012 drought more
extensive than any other since the 1950s, according to the USDA.
Illinois Climatologist Jim Angel said July's heat and lack of rain
could make this drought its worst on record, especially because
all across the state, farmers' soil is showing signs of having
very little moisture, something essential for plant health.
"In a normal season we rely on soil moisture to get you through
August, but we don't have that," Angel said.
Less corn production usually means higher food prices, according
to the USDA, though the full effect of a sparse corn harvest
wouldn't move through to grocery stores until at least 10 months
from now. But grocery shoppers could see the price of chicken or
eggs and other meats increase sooner than that, since farmers
often scale back on their livestock when the cost of corn feed is
high, which can happen when corn production is low, Nafziger said.
Still, some say there's room for optimism. Angel said long-term
forecasts show an increased chance of above-normal precipitation
and more normal temperatures over the next two weeks. The heat and
dry weather looks to be shifting to the west, maybe making the
Midwest a little wetter and milder, Angel said.