Farms.com Home   Expert Commentary

Soybean Prevented Planted Acres: Historical Background and Implications for 2015

Jun 29, 2015

By Gary Schnitkey

Department of Agricultural and Consumer Economics
University of Illinois

Recent attention has focused on delayed soybean plantings caused by wet weather, leading to the potential for large prevented planted acres. Much of this attention focuses on Missouri, Kansas, Kentucky, Tennessee, and North Carolina. Historical prevented planted acres are presented to provide perspective on possible prevented planted acres in 2015, providing further information on prevented planting contained in a previous farmdoc daily article (June 12, 2015).

Historical Prevented Planted Acres of Soybeans

Farm Service Agency (FSA), an agency of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, reports prevented planted acres. FSA generates these acres from acreage reports provided by farmers and landowners. From 1996 to 2014, the average prevented planted acres were 4,050,000 acres (see Table 1). Soybeans average 759,000 acres, representing 19% of total prevented planting acres.

Soybean prevented planted acres vary by year. Years with low prevented planted acres were in 2012 (158,000 acres), 1997 (225,000 acres), and 2006 (230,000 acres). Four years had prevented planting over 1,000,000 acres: 2001 (1,220,000 acres), 2010 (1,381,000 acre), 2011 (1,441,000 acres), and 2013 (1,697,000 acres). The highest number of prevented planting acres was 1,697,000 acres.

Not all states contribute equally to prevented plantings. Table 2 shows soybean prevented planted acres by state for the four years with over 1,000,000 prevented planted acres. States with large numbers of prevented planted acres were:

  • 2001: South Dakota (359,000 acres), Minnesota (222,000 acres), North Dakota (155,000 acres), and Missouri (144,000 acres).
  • 2010: South Dakota (458,000 acres), North Dakota (334,000 acres), and Missouri (202,000 acres).
  • 2011: North Dakota (476,000 acres), South Dakota (367,000 acres), and Illinois (156,000 acres).
  • 2013: North Dakota (442,000 acres), Minnesota (210,000 acres), and North Carolina (149,000 acres).

Three states in the upper Midwest typically have relatively large numbers of prevented planted acres: South Dakota (158,000 acre average for 1996-2014), North Dakota (154,000 acres), and Minnesota (71,000 acres). The next state contributing the most prevented planted acres is Missouri (71,000 acres). A county map supporting the observations is shown in the appendix.

Implications for 2015

USDA's planting progress reports indicate that 2015 plantings are nearing completion in South Dakota, North Dakota, and Minnesota, the traditional area where prevented planted acres are high. These states likely will have lower than average prevented planted acres.

On the other hand, soybeans plantings are notably behind in Missouri, Kansas, Kentucky, Tennessee, and North Carolina. Missouri appears to be the epicenter of late plantings. On June 21, USDA reported that only 51% of soybean acres were planted (see here). Missouri was projected to plant 5,650,000 acres in 2015 (see 2015 Prospective Planting Report), suggesting that roughly 2,500,000 acres remain to be planted in Missouri.

From 1996 to 2014, Missouri's highest prevented plantings for soybeans were 202,000 acres in 2010 (see Figure 1). In 2010, 90% of soybeans were reported as planted by National Agricultural Statistical Service by week 25 of the year (near June 21). The next highest acres were 182,000 in 2008, followed by 144,000 in 2001 (see Figure 1). Percent planted by week 25 was 66% in 2008 and 79% in 2001.

The 51% of soybeans planted in Missouri by week 25 is below the lowest observation of 66% from 1996 to 2014, suggesting that a large number of acres will be prevented from planting in Missouri. However, soybeans can be planted quickly if weather patterns change. As a matter of perspective, the highest prevented planted soybeans acres in any state from 1996 to 2014 were 476,000 acres (North Dakota in 2011). Having over 500,000 prevented planted soybean acres in any state has not been observed since 1996. Having over 1,000,000 acres would be an extreme outlier.

Source: Farmdocdaily