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Idaho Dry Bean Acres up 38 Percent

Idaho Dry Bean Acres up 38 Percent
By Sean Ellis
 
Idaho farmers planted significantly more dry bean acres this year, as rising farm-level prices for that crop make it an attractive option for a lot of producers.
 
“Prices are good and most other commodities are down right now so beans look pretty attractive to a lot of farmers,” said Mike Goodson, who grows dry beans in the Parma area.
 
The United States is the global leader in edible dry bean production and American farmers plant about 1.5 million acres a year, according to the U.S. Dry Bean Council.
 
Idaho ranks No. 5 in the nation in dry bean production but is the country’s No. 1 bean seed producing state and about 70 percent of the dry beans grown here are grown for seed.
 
According to USDA’s National Agricultural Statistics Service, Idaho farmers planted 65,000 acres of dry beans this year.
 
That’s up 38 percent from the 47,000 acres of beans that were planted last year in the Gem State.   
 
NASS estimates U.S. dry bean acres this year at 1.58 million, up 23 percent over 2019.
 
A challenging bean production season last year in Canada and some of the United States’ main bean-producing states resulted in a significant decrease in dry bean supply, according to industry leaders.
 
As a result, farm-level dry bean prices rose significantly and are up 25-40 percent, depending on variety, over the same period last year.
 
According to NASS, the average marketing price for Idaho dry beans hovered in the mid- to low-$30 per hundredweight (cwt) range from 2011-2015, then decreased to $27 in 2016 and 2017 before dropping to $23.40 in 2018 and $22.40 in 2019.
 
According to USDA’s Weekly Dry Bean market News, pintos, which drive bean prices, were selling in the $38-40 range for the week ending June 30. That’s up from $22-23 during the same period last year.
 
Given the current supply and demand scenario, it’s no big shocker that dry bean acres are up significantly in Idaho and the United States, said Idaho Bean Commission Administrator Andi Woolf-Weibye.
 
“There were some real shortages of beans world-wide last year and the shutdowns drove demand up significantly,” she said. “It doesn’t surprise me at all that acres are up that much.”
 
“We have a pretty strong bean market right now and pretty good forward contracts. The (bean acre) numbers don’t surprise me at all,” said Don Tolmie, production manager of Treasure Valley Seed Co., which operates a bean processing facility in Homedale.
 
Most of Idaho’s dry bean acres are located in the Magic Valley of southcentral Idaho and the Treasure Valley of southwestern Idaho.
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