A roundup of news, reports, and research on agribusiness and related issues.

โ€œI just started yesterday,โ€ Nelson said Tuesday, Nov. 19. โ€œIโ€™ve never started this late.โ€ Nelson has a lot of company across North Dakota. Only 23% of the 3.5 million acres of corn North Dakota farmers planted had been harvested as of Nov. 17, the National Agricultural Statistics Service said. Last year, 70% of the stateโ€™s corn had been harvested by that date, and on average, 85% of the corn is in the bin.

Two major distributors of sugar, including Edina-based United Sugars Corp., reportedly took the rare step this week of declaring โ€œforce majeure,โ€ telling customers they wonโ€™t be able to deliver on contracts because of forces beyond their control. An executive of the company didnโ€™t return calls for comment Thursday.

In its announcement, Dean Foods said that it was โ€œengaged in advanced discussionsโ€ with Dairy Farmers of America (DFA), the countryโ€™s biggest dairy co-op, regarding a possible acquisition. For one antitrust expert, however, that raises concerns about anti-competitive activity.

Though itโ€™s supposed to advocate for dairy farmers, DFAโ€™s involvement in processing also means it has an incentive to keep prices of inputs (read: milk) as low as possible.

To get to Millerโ€™s farm, river water is pumped for more than 200 miles along the Central Arizona Project canal, a feat of 20th-century engineering and funding that, once much of the stateโ€™s groundwater had been sucked nearly dry by the 1980s, allowed desert communities to flourish. Now, the government keeps close tabs on groundwater withdrawals and manages its canal water with a priority system that favors cities and tribes over agriculture in times of shortage..

Despite President Trump’s agriculture bailouts, Iowa farmers continue to see their financial condition erode, a cash crunch that had 44% of producers last year struggling to cover their bills, an Iowa State University report shows.

The percentage of financially vulnerable farmers climbed from 31% in 2014, according to the report that examines growers’ ability to cover short-term liabilities such as seed, fertilizer and herbicides with easily accessible assets such as cash, stored grain and market-ready livestock.

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