The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Peanut growers’ worry: farm bill impact

Consequenc­es could include crop’s overplanti­ng.

- By Chris Adams McClatchy News Service

BAINBRIDGE — In the heart of the nation’s peanut zone, farmers are putting substantia­lly more runners into the ground than they did last year. And in the eyes of some industry experts, that boom might spell doom.

“Runner peanuts” are used to make peanut butter — not the bigger nuts you’ll find at the ballpark — and they’re the most prevalent of the types of peanuts grown in the United States. Overall peanut acreage is expected to be up substantia­lly this year, around 30 percent more than last year throughout the nation’s 10 peanut-growing states.

“I gave a speech to the Georgia Bankers Associatio­n a few weeks ago in which I described the possible problem as the ‘peanut apocalypse,’ ” said Allen Olson, a lawyer who specialize­s in farm issues in southern Georgia.

His concern is that incentives in the recently enacted farm bill — the massive piece of legislatio­n passed by Congress and signed by President Barack Obama amid much fanfare in February — could lead to overplanti­ng and depressed prices, and ultimately might lead to farmers not receiving the benefits they expected.

Farther south, across the state line in Florida, peanut farmers are fearful but for a different reason: Because of the way the farm bill is written, certain farmers can participat­e in price support programs but others are excluded — and northcentr­al Florida farmers might get left behind.

All the concerns are swirling around a farm bill that, for the most part, treated peanuts well, experts said.

But as the U.S. Depart- ment of Agricultur­e works to put the $956 billion piece of legislatio­n into place, scant informatio­n — or in some cases outright misinforma­tion — might influence the number of acres that farmers plant as they struggle to understand the incentive systems built into the bill.

To which Stanley Fletcher, the director of the National Center for Peanut Competitiv­eness at the University of Georgia, counsels caution.

“I wait at least a year,” Fletcher said. “I want at least a year to digest it all — to cut out the rhetoric and rumors and see how USDA implements the farm bill with the rules and regulation­s before I try to go out and update farmers and update the cost of production.”

The “peanut apocalypse” Olson mentioned, if it occurs, would be the result of three new provisions in the bill.

First, acres that were historical­ly used for cotton in previous farm bills were converted to what are known as “generic” base acres in the new bill, which will open the door to more peanuts being planted this year and in later years. Then the new “price loss coverage” program — known as PLC — set a generous reference price for peanuts, also giving farmers an incen- tive to plant more acres.

But, Olson said, the farm bill also contains new payment limits per farm. If the federal government determines there are more peanuts than the market can handle, its decision could set up a chain of events that results in farmers hit- ting payment limits and not receiving the benefits they expected.

“The irony is that the high PLC payments that encouraged farmers to plant more peanuts may not ever get to those farmers,” Olson said. “The use of generic base for peanuts may further exacer- bate the problem.”

In Bainbridge, in the far southweste­rn corner of the state, Greg Calhoun has planted about 2,300 acres of peanuts, putting him back to 2012 levels after a big drop in 2013.

Planters statewide had the same experience: Very low numbers in 2013. So much of the jump this year is a return to normal levels.

Like peanut farmers across the region, Calhoun was slowed by rain early in the season, but he got his planting done by late May. And also like peanut farmers across the region, he’s taking a waitand-see attitude on how the USDA enacts the farm bill.

“It’s hard for us to actually know what to do right now,” he said. “We’re making decisions that could be changed. We just need it to be completed so we can accurately make the right decisions and not oversupply the market.”

The issue in Florida is an extension of that.

The peanut industry there is relatively young; many of the farms came into existence after 2002. Given the rules of previous farm bills, they haven’t had the chance to establish base acres — meaning a lot of their acreage isn’t allowed to participat­e in the government’s crop programs.

If those old cotton acres in Georgia switch to peanuts, the resulting heavy production will put the relatively young farms in Florida at a competitiv­e disadvanta­ge.

The growers there have complained to federal agricultur­e officials and to members of Congress, but so far nobody is sure what can be done to help them.

“D.C. is aware of the problem and they are sympatheti­c,” said Rick Dantzler, the executive director of the USDA’s Farm Service Agency for Florida. “But whether they have the latitude to make any changes that would create some relief is uncertain.”

 ?? CHRIS ADAMS PHOTOS / MCT ?? Roy Davis (left) and J.R. Smith prepare seed for planting on a peanut farm outside Bainbridge. Peanut farmers in the South are scrambling to figure out how best to take advantage of the recently passed farm bill, which, depending on where they live,...
CHRIS ADAMS PHOTOS / MCT Roy Davis (left) and J.R. Smith prepare seed for planting on a peanut farm outside Bainbridge. Peanut farmers in the South are scrambling to figure out how best to take advantage of the recently passed farm bill, which, depending on where they live,...
 ??  ?? Planting begins on Greg Calhoun’s peanut fields in southweste­rn Georgia. He has planted about 2,300 acres of peanuts, putting him back to 2012 levels after a drop in 2013.
Planting begins on Greg Calhoun’s peanut fields in southweste­rn Georgia. He has planted about 2,300 acres of peanuts, putting him back to 2012 levels after a drop in 2013.

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