An
Agricultural Apocalypse: This Drought Is Still Worse Than You Think
Glen Doty
3
August, 2012
When
I decided to dedicate a few hours a week to sharing some insights on
the energy world at large, I told myself that I would try to post
about a different topic each week - at least for the first few
months, before I covered the basics of all of major components of the
energy world and started explaining how they fit together. But with
respect to the current climate situation in America today, that
cannot be the case this week. Right now the most important story is
the drought, and most people are still missing it. Crop projections
should continue to worsen until harvest, and agricultural commodities
of all stripes are going to end up far more expensive once the dust
settles.
The
worst U.S. drought since the dust bowl.
This
is the Dust Bowl of 2012, that was clear by mid-July. The full impact
of the drought hasn't unfolded yet, but that doesn't change the
magnitude of this event. I first attempted to publish an article on
the drought the weekend of July 20-22. I succeeded in publishing an
article a week later - with a few hastily updated statistics and a
heavier tie-in to ethanol.
But
as the situation in the Midwest has gotten increasingly dire,
discussion concerning the drought has consistently held a tone of
dismissal, with many Seeking Alpha contributors treating this
extraordinary climate event as though it were some form of media
hype. Many of the published articles are rife with warnings of market
corrections and whispers of possible rainfall. The media has also
been slow to react and far less concerned than an event of this
magnitude warrants. This is akin to dismissing the earthquake/tsunami
that hit Fukushima last year as "just another earthquake in
Japan."
So
only four articles into my new hobby I've chosen to re-address
something that I had treated last week. I apologize to those that
have already encountered the brief summary I previously offered.
Flash
drought.
The
big problem that most analysts are having with understanding the
magnitude of the crisis is the extreme rapidity with which it
occurred. The following map is taken from the U.S.
Drought Monitor's May 31 report:
As
you can see, at the start of June there was a drought in the Rockies
and the Southwest, but no drought and little abnormal dryness in the
corn belt or the breadbasket. The crop reports at the time projected
record yields for 2012.
June
news was dominated by the health care brouhaha and the record heat
wave - and of course the ever-present crisis in Europe. The news
showed a few shots of dry corn in early July and then there was an
evil nut-job in Colorado who showed us all that we still can be
shocked by horror in the real world, and then the Olympics started
ramping up…
In
the end, this just hasn't taken hold in the media, and it therefore
just doesn't feel like a big deal. Besides, it's only been two
months! Worst case is the corn belt is shy around 10 inches of rain.
Right?
Wrong.
It's clear that things have changed, and have changed quickly. There are now 1,452 counties in America that have been designated as disaster areas due to drought - a list that encompasses more than half the counties in America, a list that grew by 218 counties just last week.
For
corn (CORN)
specifically, I produced the following table (you
can check my last article to compare a similar data set last week),
specifically to track the impact on corn. The 20 states listed here
are responsible for ~94% of the total
corn production in
America:
State
|
% of the total 2011
U.S. corn for grain production
|
% of the state
suffering drought conditions:
|
% of state
sufferingseveredrought
conditions
|
% of state suffering
EXTREME drought
|
% of state suffering
EXTRA-ORDINARY drought
|
Iowa
|
19.10%
|
100%
|
100%
|
30.74%
|
0.00%
|
Illinois
|
15.80%
|
100%
|
93.93%
|
71.29%
|
8.39%
|
Nebraska
|
12.40%
|
100%
|
100%
|
83.00%
|
3.46%
|
Minnesota
|
9.70%
|
35.02%
|
16.25%
|
0.18%
|
0.00%
|
Indiana
|
6.80%
|
99.59%
|
84.85%
|
59.05%
|
24.26%
|
South Dakota
|
5.30%
|
87.69%
|
60.91%
|
21.28%
|
0.00%
|
Wisconsin
|
4.20%
|
43.27%
|
35.19%
|
9.12%
|
0.00%
|
Ohio
|
4.10%
|
83.90%
|
15.80%
|
0.01%
|
0.00%
|
Kansas
|
3.60%
|
100%
|
100%
|
88.27%
|
17.45%
|
Missouri
|
2.80%
|
100%
|
100%
|
92.79%
|
8.40%
|
North Dakota
|
1.80%
|
38.20%
|
16.28%
|
0.00%
|
0.00%
|
Kentucky
|
1.50%
|
55.28%
|
32.31%
|
22.34%
|
13.37%
|
Colorado
|
1.40%
|
100%
|
99.70%
|
65.35%
|
3.27%
|
Texas
|
1.10%
|
71.64%
|
34.32%
|
10.47%
|
0.75%
|
Pennsylvania
|
0.80%
|
0.00%
|
0.00%
|
0.00%
|
0.00%
|
Tennessee
|
0.80%
|
49.87%
|
29.69%
|
12.15%
|
1.77%
|
Mississippi
|
0.80%
|
17.46%
|
7.96%
|
1.87%
|
0.00%
|
New York
|
0.70%
|
33.25%
|
0.00%
|
0.00%
|
0.00%
|
Louisiana
|
0.60%
|
13.88%
|
3.23%
|
0.00%
|
0.00%
|
Arkansas
|
0.60%
|
99.66%
|
96.12%
|
80.63%
|
44.46%
|
Total:
|
93.90%
|
|
|
|
|
If
you assume that the corn growth is evenly distributed throughout the
states, you can get a rough estimate of the percentage of the corn
that is suffering under the varying drought levels in America. As of
this most recent report: 78.9% of the nation's corn crop is suffering
under drought or worse; 68.9% is under severe drought or worse; 40.7%
is under extreme drought or worse, and 4.8% is under extraordinary
drought.
Technically,
this analysis is not valid, because the corn crop is not spread
evenly over each state. (A more thorough state-by-state analysis
should show far greater exposure to drought then this simplified
methodology expresses.)
For
a better understanding of how quickly this "flash drought"
has taken hold, the following data was obtained using this same data
set and the same assumptions over the last six weeks.
A
similar chart could be made for soybeans, as many of the states
overlap, but the situation for soybeans would
probably be worse, as states like Arkansas, Missouri, and Kansas have
a much greater share (~13.6%) in the national soybean production than
they have in the national corn production - but I haven't tabulated
the data to know for certain.
The
data also looks very bad for hay
production,
and grazing has become so poor that the federal government has opened
up protected wetlands and parks for grazing for the first time in
history.
The
lack of grazing for hay will force ranchers to purchase far more
corn, oats, barley, wheat, or whatever else they can per pound of
meat they produce forcing higher demand for all food staples.
Many
of the drought-blighted states are also large producers of wheat,
oats, barley, peanuts (Georgia did not make the list - as the focus
was corn, but the state of Georgia is one of the hardest hit by
drought in the U.S.), and rice, all of which will see far lower
yields this year (though not nearly as significant as corn and
soybeans).
A
quick international note:
There
are quite a few rumors that Russia's
drought may reduce their wheat export by 18 million tons.
It's
not Rain, it's Heat!
While
my prior article drew some criticism for over-simplification (no
factoring for vapor lift, condensation into water droplets for clouds
reducing partial vapor pressure, high and low pressure columns, or
partial humidity levels), the purpose wasn't to accurately predict
exact desertification rates. There are so many variables that such a
feat would be the work of entire research teams.
The
purpose was to show the correlation between temperature and the
amount of moisture that is drawn from the land into the atmosphere.
Much of the complexity was removed from the discussion (because it
was tedious and bogged the reader down in details that were not
central to the discussion). However, the maximum concentration
(saturation level) in the first 10,000 [ft] (~3 km) of atmosphere
still serves as a useful generalization (ignoring the upper 6 [km] of
cloud formation more than balances out ignoring partial humidity
levels).
You
are free to read my earlier work which explains this in greater
detail, but if we use this generalization we can show the drying
impact that heat has on the land in a kind of "rainfall
equivalent" - which will help put the current drought in clearer
context.
Any
day on which the temperature is warmer than average, there is more
water drawn from the land than average, which means that even with
average rainfall the land will be dryer than average. The dust bowl
of 2012 has been caused by abnormal heat, and hoping the drought
impact will lessen as we go into August (traditionally the hottest
period of the year) is essentially praying for a miracle.
Using
the maximum concentration of water in the first 3 km of atmosphere as
a useful generalization:
During the hot portion of a day with a high of 96 degrees F instead
of a high of 90 degrees, the atmosphere will be attempting to suck an
additional 0.59 inches of rainfall equivalent from the land and
biomass in order to achieve saturation at the given vapor pressure,
so if it then rained a half-inch that night, the land would be doing
little more than making up for the excess heat, but still not getting
the additional hydration it needs. If the day is 100 rather than 90,
then the first 1.05 inches of rain serve to merely keep the heat of
the day from further baking the land dray. (Again, this cannot be
treated as an exact mathematical equivalent, but it is a useful
generalization, and is far more of an accurate depiction of local
hydration levels then looking at rainfall without consideration of
temperature).
To
illustrate how this works more fully, I've taken some information
concerning the weather
of Iowa City, Iowa;
during the month of July. Iowa City was chosen for its iconic name
(Cornville of The Corn State) rather than for some weather-related
anomaly that exaggerates the impact we are discussing.
As
you can see, there were only 4 days where the temperatures did not
exceed the average high temperature and 1 night that temperatures did
not exceed the average low temperature throughout the entire month.
During the high temperature portions of the day, the atmosphere would
have attempted to leach a cumulative total of about 22.6 additional
inches of rainfall equivalent from the land (based solely on the
saturation level for the difference in temperature). During the low
temperature portion of the night, the atmosphere would be attempting
to leach an additional around 9.0 additional inches from the land
during the month.
Iowa
city has an average rainfall of 4.58 inches during the month of July,
and only received 0.26 inches. That's indicative of a 4.32 inch
shortfall. But the scorching heat has stripped between 9 and 22
inches of rainfall equivalent from the land during that same time -
which leaves the crops in a state that would be expected of a 13-26
inch shortfall (a state of "extreme drought").
The
same can be shown for the entire Midwest and High Plains. The heat
wave was the
story of the drought - we just missed it.
This
is the reason why every climate model projects some level of
desertification as the climate warms - the heat has
a larger impact than the rainfall. Ergo, there is no reason to
suspect significant remediation in the month of August, and by the
end of August there will be no time for most of the crops to recover.
Waiting until the damage is done and then reporting that the damage
was done is not helpful. We have to look at how damaging this drought
will be. It's not over yet, and for many regions critical to corn and
soybean production the worst is yet to come.
An
important note: This is not about global warming. The record heat
wave that has caused this "Dust Bowl of 2012" is a result
of the conjunction of several strong weather systems combined with an
unusually high solar maximum.
GHG
forcing has certainly served to make this summer significantly warmer
than the last time we had a similar convergence of strong weather
patterns resulting in prolonged heat waves and high solar irradiance
(1950's?), and GHG forcing will serve to make the next period when
such a convergence occurs hotter still, but the Midwest has seen
temperature increases this summer that exceed most projections for
around 2100 AD. That is NOT indicative of average warming rates due
to CO2, and there is no reason to suspect that every summer
henceforth will see a similar heat wave. Warming is occurring at a
gradual rate, not at 5-10 degrees per year. Global warming is a
genuine global concern, but it won't kill off all life on Earth in a
decade.
The
Takeaway
As
long as the Summer stays hot, it's going to get dryer for much of the
major agricultural states throughout the Midwest and the High Plains.
While there may be some fronts moving moisture in at the periphery,
the overall interior is dry enough that the moisture won't penetrate
far and won't do much to save an already devastated cropland. There
is little hope that the crop projections for corn, soybeans, wheat,
oats, rice, or barley will do anything other than continue to degrade
over the next month.
Livestock
feed requirements will increase, as the hay harvest will be horrible,
and livestock prices will remain extremely high.
That
means the market price of all of these commodities will increase (C,
S, W, O, RR, LC, LH), and there will be solid support for all
grain-related funds:
(CORN, SOYB, WEAT, JJA, JJG, DBA, GRU, UBC, COW,FUD).
Substitution and livestock demand will continue to support higher
prices in all of these products until harvest, at which point prices
will stabilize as the actual damage will be clarified.
Until
then, ignore the numbers-only focused analysis which constantly
declares that a correction is imminent. Just wait for autumn to
finally cool things off.
Some
relief may come if government is wise enough to eliminate ethanol
(FUE)
blending mandates for a year, but it is doubtful that such a move
will be made prior to the election. Ethanol is going to be far higher
priced than gasoline for the next several months regardless, so
ethanol refineries are going to see another period of extreme
bloodletting.
When
the dust settles in the fall, we'll know whether this Dust Bowl of
2012 equals or even exceeds what was seen in the 30's. But there has
been little doubt since mid July that no drought since the great dust
bowl of the 30's has matched this one.
Agricultural
industry that is based in the U.S. Northeast, the far North, the
Northwest, and/or near either the Pacific or Atlantic should be very
well positioned for the next year, as will be companies that had
invested heavily in agricultural storage over the past few years.
Message
to the agricultural industry
I
was remiss to mention this last time, but you and yours are in my
prayers. I hope that in our country's hysterical push towards
austerity that you don't get left to deal with the aftermath of this
drought without additional support.
Disclosure: I
have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate
any positions within the next 72 hours. While I hold no agricultural
commodities or funds, I consider this subject to be extremely
important to my economic portfolio because I eat food. My exposure
here is more significant because I eat meat - an activity which may
be pared back as a result of the coming trends discussed herein.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.