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Hurricanes destruction deepens US farm crisis
By Jerry Isaacs
30 September 2005
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In addition to the impact on the US economy from rising fuel
prices, hurricanes Katrina and Rita have dealt a critical blow
to American agriculture, which is already reeling from the worst
drought in the midwestern states in nearly three decades.
The destruction of crops, livestock and farm equipment, as
well as the devastation of New Orleansthe key port in the
export of US agricultural goods to the world market and the import
of fertilizers, chemicals and industrial commoditiesthreatens
to throw thousands more farmers into bankruptcy, not only in the
storm-struck areas, but throughout the US.
Even before Hurricane Rita hit western Louisiana and eastern
Texas on September 24wiping out several rural agricultural
and fishing towns with the storms 120-mph winds and the
storm surge that followedinitial estimates put agricultural
losses from Hurricane Katrina at more than $3 billion. Dairy producers
were among the hardest hit by the first hurricane, as power failures
made milking and cold storage virtually impossible, forcing many
farmers to dump their products. Poultry farmers lost millions
of chickens and up to 100,000 head of cattle70 percent of
the herdmay have died in southeast Louisiana alone.
In addition, cotton was blown from plants, rice fields were
destroyed and 20 percent of the sugar crop in Louisiana was wiped
out, according to the American Farm Bureau Federation. In New
Iberia, Louisiana, where salt water flooded the cane fields, killing
the roots of the plants, local officials said it would take years
for farmers to bounce back.
Also hard hit was the regions aquaculture, with shrimp
trawlers and oyster boats tossed ashore, processing plants wiped
out or left without power, and polluted waters being pumped to
the sea, threatening the safety of future harvests. Some analysts
predict the storm will end the once-dominant Gulf Coast shrimp
industry, which has already seen the loss of half its fleet over
the last decade due to rising fuel prices and lower-cost imports.
Boats are at the bottom of the water, people are dead
inside, said Dung Nguyen, one of many Vietnamese immigrants
who work the industry in Biloxi, Mississippi. He said many of
his fellow shrimpers lost their lives when they stayed aboard
their boats during the storm in a futile attempt to save their
livelihoods.
The devastation in the Gulf States comes on the heels of a
drought in the midwestern states of Illinois, Missouri and Wisconsin
that has dried up wells, caused insect infestation, and damaged
corn and soybean fields. A government report last month confirmed
that the corn crop in Illinois, the second-biggest producer after
Iowa, had suffered catastrophic damage, with production down 12
percent from last years record harvest. Drying plants are
unable to fight off weeds and pests, and there has not been enough
water to activate the herbicides and pesticides that protect them.
In addition, the midwestern droughtthe worst since 1988has
turned parts of the Mississippi River and its tributariesthe
Missouri and Ohio Riversinto virtual sandbars, causing towboats
and barges to run aground and creating a bottleneck up and down
the river. This crisis was exacerbated when Hurricane Katrina
hit, temporarily shutting down the Port of New Orleans, and backing
up hundreds of barges on the Mississippi, just as midwestern farmers
began shipping this years harvest.
At the mouth of the Mississippi lies the Port of Southern Louisiana,
including the Port of New Orleans, the largest shipping facility
in the United States by tonnage and the third busiest in the world.
Although the Port of New Orleans officially reopened and some
river traffic has resumed, the port has only a skeleton crew of
skilled labor and other dockworkers and has sustained damage to
equipment, cargo facilities and navigational markers.
Port authorities predict that the Port of New Orleans operating
at 80 to 100 percent of its normal activity by March 2006well
after the agricultural shipping season, that lasts from September
to November.
Continued disruption of the port would have a paralyzing effect,
not only on agriculture, but the US economy as a whole, with worldwide
implications. The Mississippi River is the central artery of a
15,000-mile river transportation network that spans most of the
US. The port city of New Orleans is the key exit point for soybean,
corn and wheat shipments to China, Japan and the rest of the world
market, shipping out roughly 65 percent of all US grain exports.
It is also the key entrance point for imported crude oil (it is
the main receiving terminal for supertankers from Saudi Arabia,
for example), as well as chemicals, steel, coal and concrete needed
for US agriculture and industry.
Farmers throughout the Midwest and southern states ship their
produce on barges down the Mississippi River to New Orleans, where
they are loaded onto ocean-going vessels. River transport has
long been the cheapest way to move commodities, and there is no
good shipping alternative, as the US does not have enough trucks
or railcars to handle the long-distance shipping of such enormous
quantities.
While the smaller corn harvest in the Midwest would tend to
raise commodity prices, the bottleneck in the Mississippi is now
producing an unexpected glut of grain, which will keep prices
down. In addition, big agribusinesses, transport companies and
processors are expected to pay even less for crops this year in
order to make up for rising fuel prices and the costs of shipping
delays. Farmerswho already only make 20 cents on every consumer
dollar spent on foodface the triple threat of falling commodity
prices, declining income from reduced harvests, and higher prices
for fuel and petroleum-based chemicals.
The crisis of overproduction and collapsing farm prices over
the last decades, along with the droughts in 1988 and in 1997,
led to widespread farm foreclosures and the depopulation of rural
areas. By the late 1990s, the number of family farmers fell below
1 million, for the first time in 200 years, further concentrating
control of the world agricultural market in the grip of gigantic
global companies such as Cargill and Archer Daniels Midland.
The current crisis facing US farmers will be deepened by these
latest shocks, which occur as the Bush administration plans to
implement $3 billion in cuts to Agriculture Department programs,
including price subsidies.
The pivotal role New Orleans plays in the US and world economy
makes all the more criminal the systematic undermining of the
citys infrastructure and flood protection system. In the
end, the 25 years of budget-cutting and free-market mania that
has driven the policies of both political parties has not only
placed the safety of the American population in peril, but has
severely destabilized economic life.
According to the Port of New Orleans, there are 60,000 people
directly employed in maritime shipping in Louisiana, and 107,000
whose jobs depend on the industry. The evacuation of New Orleans,
however, has meant that the vast majority of these and other workers
are unavailable.
Hurricane Katrina has brought sections of the news media to
the sudden realization that workersnot venture capitalistsare
the basis of the economy. They are the ones who load and unload
ships, and they need, at the very least, services such as housing,
schools and hospitals in order to perform work vital to the economy.
This has led to criticism of various public officials who initially
argued for bulldozing much of New Orleans and drastically reducing
its working class population.
As George Friedman, the founder of the geopolitical think-tank
Stratfor, wrote in last weeks New York Review of Books:
[I]n order to operate the facilities critical to the United
States, you need a workforce to do itand that workforce
is gone. Unlike other disasters, that workforce cannot return
to the region because they have no place to live. New Orleans
is gone, and the metropolitan area surrounding New Orleans is
either gone or so badly damaged that most of it will not be habitable
for a long time.
The displacement of population due to destruction, disease,
and pollution is the crisis that New Orleans faces. It is also
a national crisis, because the largest port in the United States
cannot function without a city around it. The physical and business
processes of the port cannot occur in a ghost town, and right
now, except for the remaining refugees, that is what New Orleans
is. It is not about the facilities, and it is not about the oil.
It is about the loss of a citys population and the paralysis
of the largest port in the United States.
Echoing these sentiments, Michael Olivier, Louisianas
secretary for economic development, told the New York Times,
Our greatest worry is that we need to get businesses back
up and running and we need to get the work force back. And you
need at least something for everyone, not only businesses but
the worker bees as well.
The White House, however, seems virtually oblivious to the
disasters long-term effect on the economy, let alone the
level of distress facing so many working people who have lost
their homes, jobs and livelihoods. This was made plain earlier
this week when the chairman of the White House Council of Economic
Advisers told a bankers conference in Washington that Rita
and Katrina will have a relatively modest effect
on the US economy.
See Also:
Jobless claims, an end to the housing
bubble: storm signals for US economy
[30 September 2005]
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