U.S. cotton producers intend to plant 14.44 million acres of cotton this spring, up 1.7% from 2005, according to the National Cotton Council's 23rd Annual Early Season Planting Intentions Survey (see table below).
Upland cotton intentions are 14.12 million acres, an increase of 1.4% from 2005 plantings of 13.93 million acres. Extra long staple intentions of 312,000 acres represent a 15.2% increase from 2005. The results were announced at the NCC's Annual Meeting, which began Monday in Tucson, AZ.
With estimated abandonment of 9%, total upland and ELS harvested area would be about 13.09 million acres. Applying state-level yield assumptions to projected harvested acres generates a cotton crop of 21.41 million bales. This compares to 2005's total production of 23.72 million bales. For 2006, the upland crop is projected at 20.59 million bales, while the ELS crop is pegged at 827,000 bales. Assuming average seed-to-lint ratios, cottonseed production for 2006 is projected at 7.66 million tons, down from 8.50 million last year.
The NCC survey was mailed in mid-December of 2005 to about one-third of the producers across the 17-state Cotton Belt. Surveys had to be returned by mid-January.
Dr. Stephen Slinsky, the NCC's senior economist, says final acreage decisions will be heavily influenced by expected returns of cotton and competing crops. "However, this year producers are paying special attention to higher fuel and fertilizer costs and soil moisture conditions," Slinsky notes.
Based on survey results, the Southeast, Mid-South and Southwest regions show intended upland cotton planting increases of 3.3%, 6.2% and 0.3%, respectively. Decreases in upland cotton plantings of 23% were indicated for the West.
According to the survey, all Southeastern states except Alabama indicate increased acreage in 2006. The survey revealed a modest decline in Alabama's cotton acreage, less than 0.5%, and indicated a shift into corn and soybeans. Increased cotton acres in other Southeastern states appear to be at peanuts' expense. For all Mid-South states, survey results indicate a shift out of corn and rice. The sharp increase in fertilizer prices are causing growers to shift away from nitrogen-intensive crops such as corn and rice, and some of those acres are moving into cotton. In addition, favorable cotton yields over the past two years have boosted expectations on cotton returns.
The Southwest shows a very modest increase of 0.3% to 6.25 million acres planted to cotton due to higher acreage in Kansas and Oklahoma. Texas growers - lacking the moisture enjoyed last year - indicated they would plant 19,000 acres fewer acres to cotton in 2006, a 0.3% decline. All Western states show significant declines in upland, with the region down 23% to 551,000 acres. Results indicate a shift into more favorably priced ELS cotton and specialty crops.