Home » State’s Agriculture and Forestry Losses Due to Drought Reach a Staggering Number

State’s Agriculture and Forestry Losses Due to Drought Reach a Staggering Number

by Stephen Greer
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Louisiana agriculture and forestry suffered $1.69 billion in damage due to this summer’s drought and excessive heat, according to preliminary estimates by LSU AgCenter experts.

Long stretches of record-high temperatures and little to no rain led to yield and quality losses and increased production costs for farmers of row crops as well as fruits, nuts and vegetables. Livestock producers dealt with animal health issues and struggled to grow adequate forage. Forest landowners faced wildfires while crawfish producers monitored the threat of saltwater intrusion.

In a recently released report, AgCenter economists Kurt GuidryJinggang Guo and Raghav Goyal and forester Robbie Hutchins detail the far-reaching effects of the challenging weather conditions on the state’s agriculture and forestry—an industry with an annual value of about $11.4 billion.

“Unlike past natural disasters, which impacted only portions of the state for short periods of time, drought conditions coupled with record-high temperatures persisted statewide throughout most of the 2023 production season,” the authors write.

They based their damage estimates on reports from AgCenter agents and specialists throughout Louisiana.

About half of the total damage, $836.5 million, occurred on farms where crops performed poorly or died. With the lack of usual summer rainfall, farmers also racked up expenses from having to irrigate more often. Soybeans and sugarcane took the hardest economic hit, with those industries losing a combined $595 million.

Livestock and hay producers sustained $389.2 million in losses stemming from animal deaths, forced liquidation, reduced sale weights, abortions and reduced milk production. Feed costs soared as the heat and drought hampered forage production and limited grazing capacity.

Wildfires burned more than 50,000 acres of forests, destroying $71.4 million of timber. Another $249.5 million in damage was caused by drought conditions that slowed tree growth and forced the replanting of failed seedlings.

The impact to the crawfish industry is estimated at $139.8 million. The production and harvest season has just begun, however. Read the full report from the LSU AgCenter.

Source : Business Report

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