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In the lower 48 states, there was a subtle increase in the overall area experiencing at least some drought, from 61.77 percent last week to 63.2 percent. There was little change in the overall area seeing exceptional or extreme drought, which went from 6.26 percent last week to 6.31 percent this week. Rain is expected in the northern Plains in coming days, though it may be too late to save many withered crops. The U.S. Agriculture Department twice has slashed its forecast for this year's corn and soybean output because of the drought. In the spring, it forecast the nation's biggest harvest, as farmers planted 96.4 million acres of corn
-- the most since 1937. But the agency now expects the nation to produce 10.8 billion bushels, the fewest since 2006. If that estimate holds, the federal government says it will be enough to meet the world's needs and ensure there are no shortages. But experts say food prices will almost certainly climb
-- corn is widely used in products ranging from cosmetics to cereal, colas to candy bars. While just 1 percent of the nation's corn crop is brought in from the fields by this time of year, the USDA said Monday in its weekly crop progress report that 4 percent of the harvest is complete. The reaping is farther along in Kansas, Missouri, South Dakota, Kentucky and Tennessee. In an occupation that's at nature's mercy, "we've got to calculate we're gonna lose a crop once in a while and calculate that into our expenses," said Nelson, whose northeastern Nebraska farmland is about 60 percent corn, the rest soybeans. "Sometimes it's heat, drought, excessive rains, bugs, winds. I guess that's what keeps us coming back for next year."
[Associated
Press;
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