'Desperate for tires.' Components shortage roils U.S.
harvest
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[October 12, 2021] By
P.J. Huffstutter and Mark Weinraub
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Dale Hadden cannot find
any spare tires for his combine harvester. So the Illinois farmer told
his harvest crew to avoid driving on the sides of roads this autumn to
avoid metal scraps that could shred tires.
New Ag Supply in Kansas is pleading with customers to order parts now
for spring planting. And in Iowa, farmer Cordt Holub is locking up his
machinery inside his barn each night, after thieves stole hard-to-find
tractor parts from a local Deere & Co dealership.
"You try to baby your equipment, but we're all at the mercy of luck
right now," said Holub, a fourth-generation corn and soybean farmer in
Buckingham, Iowa.
Manufacturing meltdowns are hitting the U.S. heartland, as the
semiconductor shortages that have plagued equipment makers for months
expand into other components. Supply chain woes now pose a threat to the
U.S. food supply and farmers' ability to get crops out of fields.
Farmers say they are scrambling to find workarounds when their machinery
breaks, tracking down local welders and mechanics. Growers looking to
buy tractors and combines online are asking for close-up photos of the
machine's tires, because replacements are expensive and difficult to
find, said Greg Peterson, founder of the Machinery Pete website which
hosts farm equipment auctions.
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"As harvest ends, we will see farmers at equipment auctions not for the
machinery - but for parts," Peterson said. "We're already hearing from
guys talking about buying a second planter or sprayer, just for parts."
For some farmers, the shortages are forcing them to reuse - or repair -
old parts.
At their small welding shop in western Washington, Rami and Bob
Warburton can barely keep up with all the orders from farmers needing
something repaired from fittings for irrigation systems to a cracked
bulldozer bucket.
"We were in the middle of a drought up here," Rami Warburton said. "At
that time, they couldn't wait to water their fields for a month. The
crops will be dead by then."
'TYLENOL MOMENTS'
Kinks in the supply chain due to COVID-19 shutdowns in manufacturing
hubs in the United States and Asia, a container shortage snarling major
ports, and a dearth of workers prevent equipment manufacturers from
fully cashing in on a lucrative moment, when grain prices have soared to
the highest in nearly a decade.
The Purdue University/CME Group Ag Economy Barometer, a monthly measure
of farmer economic sentiment, fell 10% to its lowest level since July
2020 in early October. Supply concerns are weighing heavily on growers,
with 55% of farmers surveyed saying that low inventories have affected
their plans to buy machinery.
Access to steel, plastic, rubber and other raw materials has been scarce
during the pandemic, and manufacturers are preparing for even more
shocks after power shortages forced several Chinese smelters to cut
production in recent weeks.
When executives from farm machinery maker AGCO Corp visited Midwest
suppliers this summer, they found some companies were operating at only
60% staffing levels, said Greg Toornman, who oversees AGCO’s global
supply chain management.
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Toornman said staff levels are dropping at some suppliers in the
Dakotas, Nebraska and Texas, as workers object to President Joe Biden's
vaccine mandate, drop out of the workforce for fear of getting COVID-19
or move to other jobs.
"It's the perfect storm of Tylenol moments," Toornman said. "It's one
headache after another."
The supply squeeze has put particular pressure on equipment dealerships,
who typically see their service business boom during the traditional
September through November harvest season.
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Dale Nething, 86, transfers a load of corn from his truck to a grain
silo on his family farm in Ravenna, Ohio, U.S., October 11, 2021.
REUTERS/Dane Rhys
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This year, some have resorted to sifting through decade-old inventory for
solutions. One pain point for dealerships is an industry-wide shortage of GPS
receivers, which are used to run tractor guidance and data systems.
At Ag-Pro, the largest privately-owned Deere & Co dealership in North America,
staff in Ohio have been digging out GPS units that date back to 2004. Until now,
they were essentially worthless.
But producers can still use them to record a digital harvest map of their farms
– something many need when talking to their bankers, landlords and crop
insurance agents.
COMPONENTS TRIAGE
Equipment manufacturers are faced with a painful choice this harvest season:
Send parts to factories to build new tractors and combines to sell to farmers or
redirect those parts into the field to repair broken equipment for existing
customers?
For AGCO and rival manufacturer CNH Industrial N.V., the answer is the latter.
"You can't afford not to support those customers in the field," AGCO's Toornman
said. "When you're harvesting, timing is everything."
CNH estimates that supply chain constraints ranging from increases in freight to
higher raw materials prices have cost the company $1 billion.
That lag has forced the company to turn some factory parking lots into storage
lots. At CNH's combine plant in Grand Island, Nebraska, hundreds of unfinished
combines sit outside, waiting for parts.
Meanwhile, CNH is redirecting components that can be used on its Case IH and New
Holland equipment to customers in the field, a company representative said.
CNH has been signaling to dealers that supply chain problems and parts shortages
for Case IH farm equipment are ongoing, according to Reuters interviews with six
dealers. The manufacturer said in a statement it is meeting customer needs "the
best we can given these unprecedented challenges."
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Deere said it is reorganizing shipping containers to make more room for goods,
leasing extra cranes to expedite unloading ships at ports, and expanding its
trucking fleet.
But component shortages are "particularly challenging for farmers facing what is
already a short window of time to harvest," said Luke Gakstatter, senior vice
president of Deere's aftermarket and customer support.
In some cases, the company has delivered unfinished machinery to customers.
Missouri farmer Andy Kapp's brand new combine rolled off the assembly line
missing some of the high-tech cameras that help provide the very efficiency he
paid hundreds of thousands of dollars for.
But he is using it anyway, and even has stocked up on some extra parts, in case
the combine breaks down.
"As you get toward the end of harvest, machinery and people get more tired,"
Kapp said. "It's a new machine. It won't surprise us if there are a few loose
bolts."
(Reporting By P.J. Huffstutter and Mark Weinraub in Chicago; additional
reporting by Dane Rhys in Monroeville, Ohio; Editing by Caroline Stauffer and
Marguerita Choy)
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