Later start on smaller crop of Idaho potatoes this summer

Later start on smaller crop of Idaho potatoes this summer

Later start on smaller crop of Idaho potatoes this summer

六月 29, 2022

Supplies of Idaho potatoes continue to be extremely tight and will likely gap before fresh crop potatoes come on later this summer.

Ryan Wahlen, Sales Manager of Pleasant Valley Potato Inc.:
 

"We’re at the end of the storage crop and supplies have become much tighter. The current crop is also about two weeks behind across the state, so shippers are trying to make the supplies that they do have in storage stretch a little longer than normal to cover a gap because there’s going to be a gap. And one that’s probably longer than normal."
Behind that new crop delay is largely a lack of heat.

Ryan Wahlen:
 
"It went into the ground on time. But it’s just been a very cool spring and the potatoes haven’t had a chance to get the heat units that they need to grow."
On the western side of the state, the crop is expected to begin harvest between the first week and the middle of August while on the eastern side, the harvest may not begin until the end of August.
 
Potato harvesting in Idaho

Potato harvesting in Idaho

The new crop will also be smaller. The United Potato Growers of Idaho acreage count last season was 314,000 acres and Wahlen says this year, reports are that the acreage count for 2022 will be 289,000 acres, a drop of 25,000 acres.

Some prices push up daily

Not surprisingly, demand is strong for potatoes as is pricing.

Ryan Wahlen:
 
"In some cases, prices are moving up daily, and I think that could be the case throughout the remainder of the crop."
While prices are up, so are all the cost inputs of potato production.

Ryan Wahlen:
 
"Whether it’s labor or fuel, all input costs going into producing a package of potatoes are up and the same is true for the growers--probably even to a greater extent. Fertilizer costs are up 150 percent or more relative to last season. Fuel is up 100 percent relative to last season."
In fact, the Idaho Grower Shippers Association (IGSA) funded a new report which concluded that overall packing costs for Idaho potatoes have risen by 36 percent in the past two years.

Ryan Wahlen:
 
"I think that’s a big factor in a lot of the fields supplied with surface irrigation. They didn’t plant potatoes because the forecast was that there wasn’t going to be sufficient water to harvest them. Most of those fields were planted with alternative crops such as wheat and barley. Growers could plant those crops and get a good return."
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