Daily Digest
Campus News
Research & Expertise
Students
Faculty
Staff
Fund-Raising
Alumni
Athletics
Reminders
Events
Recreation
Training
Campus Calendars
Submit Info
In Print
Contact Us
News Archive
Campus Experts Lookup

RSS Feed

What is RSS?

Subscribe to Daily Headlines


Daily Headlines Home
Search Daily Headlines:

University Relations
800 Hotz Hall
University of Arkansas
Fayetteville, AR 72701

479.575.5555
FAX 479.575.4745

urelinfo@uark.edu

 
FOR RELEASE: Tuesday, August 30, 2005

Fuel Prices and Drought Hit Farmers Hard

High input costs and current commodity prices were the topics of many conversations at a recent University of Arkansas Division of Agriculture field day.

High input costs and current commodity prices were the topics of many conversations at a recent University of Arkansas Division of Agriculture field day.

The Aug.25 field day at the Northeast Research and Extension Center (NEREC) at Keiser in Mississippi County included a tour of research fields of cotton, rice, soybeans, corn and grain sorghum. Most Arkansas row-crop producers plan for a mid-summer drought and have an irrigation system to water at least some fields. The state has 1.5 million acres of rice, which is grown in flooded fields. Most of the state's 910,000 acres of cotton and 320,000 acres of corn are irrigated. About two-thirds of the three million acres planted in soybeans are irrigated if water is available.

The price of diesel fuel to run irrigation pumps and other equipment has nearly doubled in two years. The pumps have run much longer than usual because of the severity of the drought. Variety performance tests for soybean, cotton, corn and grain sorghum are conducted in both irrigated and non-irrigated fields to determine which varieties are best for dryland production.

To read more, please go to http://www.arkansasagnews.com/Publications/Agnews/agnews05-48.html.