U.S. farmers race to ready for Hurricane
Matthew's blast
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[October 07, 2016]
By Chris Prentice
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Hurricane Matthew, the
fiercest Caribbean storm in nearly a decade, roiled commodities markets
and forced companies from cane refiners to orange juice makers to
shutter as it whipped its way toward the southeastern United States on
Thursday.
Southeastern companies were closing down operations ahead of a storm
that could threaten some two million tonnes of sugar and trees
representing over 90 million boxes of citrus fruits in Florida. About
half a million acres of cotton were at risk from torrential rain in
North and South Carolina, where farmers have already been struggling
during a rainy harvest.
Officials issued a state of emergency for parts of Florida, Georgia and
the Carolinas for the Category 4 hurricane that by Thursday afternoon
had already taken the lives of 140 people, mostly in Haiti. Port
operations along the coast were slowing or shut.
For commodities markets including U.S. sugar, orange juice and cotton,
the storm prompted a volatile week of trade. Though forecasters like
senior meteorologist Drew Lerner of World Weather Inc said damage to
Florida's sugar and citrus crops would likely be limited, producers were
readying for the worst.
The storm has forced a shutdown of sugar operations just days into the
harvest, said Ryan Weston, executive vice president of the Sugar Cane
League, which represents growers in Florida, Texas and Hawaii.
"Depending on the intensity and path of the winds, hurricanes will knock
the cane down to the ground, slowing harvest way down. It hurts this
harvest and the next," Weston said.
The storm was expected to hit Florida or brush along the state's east
coast through Friday night, then work its way up the Atlantic coast.
As of 5 p.m. (2100 GMT) Thursday, Matthew contained sustained winds of
140 mph and gusts up to 165 mph, according to the U.S. National
Hurricane Center. It was about 100 miles east-southeast of West Palm
Beach, Florida, and was moving to the north-northwest at 14 mph.
Florida's east coast, predominantly grapefruit country, was expected to
bear the brunt of the storm. There, trees have already been weakened
from disease, said Lerner.
"Our growers are already facing challenges," said Nikki Hayde, senior
marketing manager for Florida's Natural Growers, a cooperative of about
1,000 citrus farmers throughout the state.
"We are trying to get out orders that were scheduled for Thursday and
Friday on the road as quickly as possible," she said.
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Cars are seen along Deerfield beach near Coral Springs while
Hurricane Matthew approaches in Florida, U.S. October 5, 2016.
REUTERS/Henry Romero
'HARVESTING AS FAST AS WE CAN'
The U.S. livestock industry was also closely tracking the storm's
path, likely to brush the hog-rich Carolinas.
Smithfield Foods, a subsidiary of WH Group Ltd and the world's
largest hog producer and pork processor, moved to protect people,
animals and buildings from the impending storm, said company
spokeswoman Keira Lombardo in an e-mail.
Crews at the port of Wilmington, North Carolina, prepared for
Matthew's winds by lowering container stacks and tying down
equipment.
In North and South Carolina's cotton-growing regions, farmers raced
to bring in fiber from fields where rains have delayed harvesting
and the plants were at one of their most vulnerable stages, most
susceptible to the 2 to 15 inches of rain expected.
"It's tricky," said Michael Quinn, president and chief executive of
Carolinas Cotton Growers Cooperative Inc. "The growers are
harvesting as fast as they can."
“We are closely monitoring conditions ahead of the storm and working
proactively with farmers to help them prepare for a significant
rainfall event. Governor McCrory has declared a state of emergency
for all 100 counties in North Carolina as we brace for as much as 10
to 12 inches of rain in our coastal areas,” said North Carolina
Department of Environmental Quality spokeswoman Stephanie Hawco.
(Corrects quote in last paragraph to say "for all 100 counties in
North Carolina," not "for all 100 counties in central and eastern
North Carolina".)
(Reporting by Chris Prentice in New York and Theopolis Waters and
Karl Plume in Chicago; Editing by James Dalgleish)
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