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Hurricane Helene Causes Billions in Ag Damage

By Ryan Hanrahan

Bloomberg’s Gerson Freitas Jr and Ilena Peng reported that “Hurricane Helene has halted chicken processing plants and caused severe damage to some flocks, while also downing pecan trees and flattening cotton crops, as floodwaters swamped the southern US.”

“Every commodity was impacted, with cotton, pecans, poultry and timber the hardest hit, according to Matthew Agvest, communications director for the Georgia Department of Agriculture,” Freitas Jr. and Peng reported. “While it’s still early in the assessment stage, the state expects Helene to be more costly than Hurricane Michael in 2018, which caused $2.5 billion in agricultural damage.”

Across the southern U.S., “the crop losses alone could trigger $7 billion in insurance payouts, a US Department of Agriculture official estimated Tuesday,” reported Peng, Freitas Jr, Ari Natter, and Josh Saul.

The Associated Press’ Stephen Smith, Kate Payne and Heather Hollingsworth reported that “Moody’s Analytics said it expects $15 billion to $26 billion in property damage. AccuWeather’s preliminary estimate of the total damage and economic loss from Helene in the U.S. is between $95 billion and $110 billion.”

Poultry Hit Especially Hard in Georgia

Freitas Jr. and Peng reported that “damage caused by the powerful storm has the potential to further constrain poultry production growth in the US at a time when demand is surging. Georgia and North Carolina are among the largest US chicken producing states.”

“On Saturday, Georgia governor Brian Kemp said in a press conference that 107 poultry facilities had been ‘damaged or totally destroyed by the storm,'” Freitas Jr. and Peng reported. “Nikki Richardson, a spokeswoman for JBS, said the company was still examining the extension of the impact to growers. ‘We know many birds have been lost in some areas and the damage to some farms has been severe,’ she said.”

The Georgia Farm Bureau’s Jennifer Whittaker reported that “numerous reports of flattened or damaged chicken houses came in from Appling, Atkinson, Bulloch, Coffee, and Jeff Davis counties. Reports like this are expected from more counties in Southeast Georgia.”

“On the Appling County poultry farm of Adam & Lori Carter, that they farm along with his father, Ludy Carter, Helene completely flattened two layer chicken houses and heavily damaged a third,” Whittaker reported. “Thankfully the Carters were unharmed, and they didn’t have birds in the houses when the storm struck. As fate would have it, a new flock of hens was scheduled to have been placed in their houses the night of Sept. 26 but was canceled due to the pending storm.”

“The Georgia Department of Agriculture (GDA) reports that 100 poultry farms in Coffee County were affected by the storm,” Whittaker reported. “A table egg producer in Pierce County has 17 houses down, according to the GDA. In Evans County five breeder houses are down and 12 pullet houses lost their roofs.”

Lawmakers Call for Ag Aid

FERN’s Ag Insider reported Tuesday that “Hurricane Helene struck the U.S. Southeast as crops were maturing for harvest and growers will need emergency assistance, said Senate Agriculture chairwoman Debbie Stabenow on Monday.”

“‘This was a horrible blow to farmers, ranchers, and rural communities across the Southeast,” said Stabenow,” according to FERN’s reporting. “‘I’m focused on ensuring that these farmers and ranchers get they emergency assistance they need to get back on their feet as soon as possible.”

In addition, AJC News’ Greg Bluestein reported Tuesday that “Democratic U.S. Sen. Jon Ossoff and Republican U.S. Rep. Austin Scott launched a bipartisan effort Tuesday urging congressional leaders to swiftly approve disaster relief aid for an agriculture industry facing ‘catastrophic losses’ from Hurricane Helene.”

“They organized a letter signed by Georgia’s congressional delegation and more than a dozen other legislators that presses House and Senate leaders to urgently help farmers who have already faced ‘multiple growing seasons without sufficient federal support,'” Bluestein reported.

Progressive Farmer’s Chris Clayton reported that “the widespread agricultural destruction left in the wake of Hurricane Helene across the Southeast U.S. will likely spark Congress to eventually approve an aid package for 2024 natural disasters with early estimated damage reports at more than $15 billion across the region.”

Source : illinois.edu

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Spring 2026 weather outlook for Wisconsin; What an early-arriving El Niño could mean

Video: Spring 2026 weather outlook for Wisconsin; What an early-arriving El Niño could mean

Northeast Wisconsin is a small corner of the world, but our weather is still affected by what happens across the globe.

That includes in the equatorial Pacific, where changes between El Niño and La Niña play a role in the weather here -- and boy, have there been some abrupt changes as of late.

El Niño and La Niña are the two phases of what is collectively known as the El Niño Southern Oscillation, or ENSO for short. These are the swings back and forth from unusually warm to unusually cold sea surface temperatures in the Pacific Ocean along the equator.

Since this past September, we have been in a weak La Niña, which means water temperatures near the Eastern Pacific equator have been cooler than usual. That's where we're at right now.

Even last fall, the long-term outlook suggested a return to neutral conditions by spring and potentially El Niño conditions by summer.

But there are some signs this may be happening faster than usual, which could accelerate the onset of El Niño.

Over the last few weeks, unusually strong bursts of westerly winds farther west in the Pacific -- where sea surface temperatures are warmer than average -- have been observed. There is a chance that this could accelerate the warming of those eastern Pacific waters and potentially push us into El Niño sooner than usual.

If we do enter El Nino by spring -- which we'll define as the period of March, April and May -- there are some long-term correlations with our weather here in Northeast Wisconsin.

Looking at a map of anomalously warm weather, most of the upper Great Lakes doesn't show a strong correlation, but in general, the northern tiers of the United States do tend to lean to that direction.

The stronger correlation is with precipitation. El Niño conditions in spring have historically come with a higher risk of very dry weather over that time frame, so this will definitely be a transition we'll have to watch closely as we move out of winter.