Wet weather in the nation’s leading cotton-producing state, Texas, is expected to trim cotton production. The nation’s crop took an additional hit when torrential rains hit the Carolinas just prior to harvest, decimating a significant portion of that region’s 2015 cotton crop.

“It appears that of the approximately 4.5 million tons of cottonseed produced this year, 2.5 million tons will be available for feeding dairy cows,” says Tom Wedegaertner, director of cottonseed research and marketing, Cotton Inc.

From last year’s crop, about 3.1 million tons of cottonseed found a spot in dairy cattle rations.

The USDA’s World Agricultural Supply and Demand Estimates, released Nov. 10, indicate a slight decrease in production over the last month. Currently, the 2015 crop is projected to produce 13.28 million bales (compared with an estimated 16.32 million bales in 2014), netting about 4.5 million tons of cottonseed, compared with 5.1 million tons in 2014 – a 12 percent decrease.

John R.C. Robinson, Texas A&M University professor and extension specialist economist of cotton marketing, describes this year’s crop as “fairly small,” as a result of fewer acres planted and reduced yields.

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“Due to the smaller crop, prices will most likely go up and be relatively strong this fall and winter,” predicts cottonseed merchandiser Larry Johnson of Cottonseed LLC, La Crosse, Wisconsin.

Despite challenges in Texas and the Carolinas, Johnson says the Mid-South produced high yields with great quality. The Mid-South is the nation’s second largest cotton-growing region.

While cottonseed availability will decrease, demand remains an unanswered question. Softer milk prices, excellent homegrown forages and lower priced competitive feed ingredients may lower demand, says Johnson.

Wedegaertner says the cottonseed market will always ebb and flow, and encourages dairy producers to prepare for price peaks. “A little bit of planning and staying up-to-date on market conditions can help dairy producers mitigate price swings and keep cottonseed in their rations.”

For more information, including reports on market conditions, feeding information and a list of suppliers, visit the Cotton Inc. website.  PD

—From Cotton Inc. news release