April 8, 2016

1 Min Read

U.S. rice production declined 13 percent in 2015-16 (August-July) to 192.3 million hundredweight (cwt), down 29.9 cwt from a year earlier, according to USDA’s Economic Research Service.

The decline in production was the result of both smaller plantings and a lower average yield.

At 2.614 million acres, 2015-16 rice plantings were 11.5 percent below a year earlier, primarily reflecting weather-related problems that included excessive rain in the Mississippi Delta early in the growing season and long-term drought in California and Texas.

The U.S. average yield of 7,470 pounds per acre was 1.4 percent below a year earlier, largely due to the adverse weather in much of the South that delayed plantings and interfered with field operations during the growing season.

Despite the sharp decline in the 2015 crop, reported ERS, U.S. supplies are projected to contract by only 5 percent due to the substantial quantity of rice that was carried over from the previous year, when production reached the fourth highest level on record due to strong prices and normal weather in the South that boosted acreage.

 

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