12 CapitalPress.com October 21, 2016 Water Election CONTINUED from Page 1 CONTINUED from Page 1 where water held out a lit- tle bit longer in the system, said Bill Buhrig, an Oregon State University cropping systems extension agent in Ontario. In areas where water was scarce, a lot of early season crops such as cereal, wheat or triticale were planted. As a result, Buhrig said, a lot of onions and cereals were planted on the same ground several years in a row and farmers got out of their normal fi ve- to six-year rotations, which is not ideal for soil health. “To go to a full allotment enables growers to get back into the rotations that really benefi t both what their pro- duction needs are and soil health,” he said. As a result of the drought, acreage for some water-in- tensive crops, such as sugar beets, was cut signifi cantly. After falling to 4,725 acres in 2014 and 5,500 acres in 2015, sugar beet acres in the area bounced back to 8,000 this year, which is close to normal. The ground left fallow the past few years has also been put back into produc- tion, said Stuart Reitz, an OSU cropping systems ex- tension agent. The full allotment “gives He said federal policies erect barriers to entering and stay- ing in business, particularly for small farmers and ranchers. “They feel the government is not trying to protect them, trying to help them, and they’re won- dering how they’re going to stay in business,” Clovis said. He said a Trump adminis- tration would support regional regulations to take into consid- eration different climates, geog- raphy, land uses and ownership. “Those 13 states in the West- ern part of the United States probably ought to have their own rules because so much land is owned by the federal govern- ment,” he said. Merrigan said regulations put businesses on equal footing and protect the public. She cited organic standards and market- ing orders as examples of farm- er-driven rules. “I think this anti-regulatory drumbeat is not helpful,” she said. Said Clovis: “I can’t let that go. “The fact is we have a bur- densome regulatory regime that imposes itself, particularly on smaller enterprises because they do not have the wherewithal to fi nd the compliance staff,” he said. Merrigan said farmers can ensure their survival by participating in government Sean Ellis/Capital Press A sugar beet fi eld in Eastern Oregon is irrigated in June. A full water allotment for the fi rst time in four years has made a big difference for farmers who depend on the Owyhee Reservoir to irrigate their crops. people more fl exibility on what they can grow and where they can grow,” he said. “Having those short water years threw every- body’s rotations off.” Dairyman Frank Ausman likes to grow most of his own feed but had to leave one of his three farms idle the past two years to spread what little water he did get to the other two. He was able to put all three into production this year. “It’s made a huge differ- ence,” he said. “We have ba- sically got back to normal.” When the OID system stopped delivering water Sept. 30, there was 166,000 acre-feet of carryover water in the reservoir, less than normal but much more than the 5,000 acre-feet left the past two years. “From the get-go, when we set the allotment, our goal was to try to carry over 100,000 acre-feet and we actually did better than that,” Chamberlin said. “We’re pretty pleased we were able to carry over that much.” 1,000 Nuts California nut acres CONTINUED from Page 1 For years, California’s nut boom defi ed gravity. The production, bearing acreage, prices and total value of wal- nut and almond crops have been rapidly growing for the past two decades — particu- larly since 2005, according to the National Agricultural Sta- tistics Service. Bearing almond acreage has more than doubled, from 418,000 acres in 1995 to near- ly 900,000 this year. Produc- tion has increased from 370 million pounds to an antici- pated 2.05 billion pounds this year. A 2014 study by Sumner and others found that almond production directly and indi- rectly contributes more than $21.5 billion annually to the economy and creates more than 100,000 jobs. Almonds account for about one-quarter of all farm exports from the state. Walnut acreage has been trending upward since 1988, from 177,000 acres to 315,000 this year. Production has more than doubled during that peri- od, to a record 670,000 tons this year, and the total crop value increased from $193 million in 1988 to $1.9 billion in 2014. Pistachios are the other ris- ing star, with 310,000 acres of trees in the state, according to the American Pistachio Grow- *Estimate Almonds Walnuts Pistachios 600 400 890: Up 74.5% from 2000 300: Up 50% from 2000 510 200 200 74.6 232.7: Up 212% from 2000 0 2000 ’05 ’10 Sources: USDA NASS; California Pistachio Commission ‘Demand is strong’ Nut boom (Thousands of bearing acres) 800 Like Lindauer, most in the industry are taking the lull in prices in stride. The com- modity groups are stepping up their efforts to fi nd new customers for nuts, and grow- ers are beginning to make or- chard-management decisions that refl ect new realities. If there’s a ceiling on how many nuts California can produce and still maintain profi tability, they remain convinced they haven’t yet reached it. “Leading into the new crop year, demand is strong,” said Richard Waycott, the Al- mond Board of California’s president and chief executive offi cer. “Pricing is at a range where it has rebounded from the lows that we hit back in April.” Finite water resources amid the ongoing drought may slow the expansion a bit, and lower prices may mean tree nuts are less attractive to those who would plant or- chards strictly as investments, said Daniel Sumner, direc- tor of the Agricultural Issues Center at the University of California-Davis. “I wouldn’t say we’re done” expanding, Sumner said. “It partly depends on how we get things organized when it comes to groundwater and (issues surrounding) sur- face water.” conservation programs. “Do everything that good science is saying on the farm, cost-share. And then say to them, ‘And now you’re not going to be regulated out of business be- cause you’ve done everything that we’ve asked of you,” Mer- rigan said. Clinton and Trump both con- demn the Trans-Pacifi c Partner- ship, leaving the surrogates little room to distinguish their candi- dates. On immigration, Clovis said the H2-A visa program could be streamlined to supply agriculture with workers. “If they want a legal work- force, we can work with them to make it legal,” Clovis said. Merrigan said agriculture would be better served by im- migration reform than building a wall. Clinton “is ready to lead us past the current political im- passe, which is crippling the agricultural industry,” Merrigan said. Clovis stressed that the next president will have the opportu- nity to appoint at least one U.S. Supreme Court justice, maybe more. He also said Trump wants to lower corporate tax rates. Merrigan listed several gov- ernment initiatives favored by Clinton, including installing so- lar panels in rural areas, bringing high-speed internet connections to rural homes and supporting a new generation of farmers, par- ticularly women and veterans. “We can’t afford to ignore any tools in our toolbox,” she said. Tim Hearden/Capital Press Piles of empty shells and other natural debris that was kicked out of the processor await use behind the Crain Walnut Shelling plant near Los Molinos, Calif. The waste will be used as a soil amendment before a new orchard is planted. ers. This year’s crop — esti- mated to be as much as 800 million pounds — will easily surpass the record crop of 555 million pounds in 2012. Near- ly all U.S. pistachios grow in California. Even more nut trees will come into production in the next few years. According to NASS, about 220,000 almond acres and 65,000 walnut acres were yet to begin bearing as of last year. About 70,000 acres of pistachio trees in the ground are non-bearing, said Richard Matoian, the Pista- chio Growers executive di- rector. For all three nuts, planting a new orchard is a huge invest- ment. Preparing and planting each acre of trees costs about $3,768 for walnuts, $2,327 for almonds and $1,932 for pista- chios, according to the UC Cooperative Extension’s most recent cost estimates. Market correction In the past year, supply has caught up to demand as inter- national competitors ramped up production. As equilibrium was reached, prices fell. The overall value of last year’s walnut crop — $977 million — was a little more than half the record $1.9 billion 2014 crop, according to NASS. “For us, we see the mar- ket as still pretty strong,” said Dennis Balint, president of the California Walnut Com- mission. “The problem is we’re seeing growth in other countries’ crops. China, if you believe what they report, is expecting a 10 percent higher crop.” Chile will probably be looking at a record crop, he said. “We have to be cogni- zant of the fact that we are competing against other pro- ducers.” While last year’s almond crop was smaller than the previous year’s, it still outper- formed expectations, which caused a price slide, Waycott said. The current average price of $2.50 per pound for nonpareils is still profi table, industry insiders say. Meanwhile, large pista- chio crops in Iran during the past two years enabled that country to gain market share in destinations such as China. California growers dealt with a small crop last year because of drought and a lack of win- ter chilling hours, Matoian said. This year, pistachio grow- ers have been initially guar- anteed between $1.70 and $1.80 per pound, down from an average of $3.57 per pound they received in 2014, he said. That price could increase via a negotiated “marketing bonus” that growers usually receive at the season’s end, he said. Despite the price decreas- es, the average California tree nut farm is still profi t- able, according to the UCCE estimates. In established or- chards, walnuts cost $4,703 an acre per year to produce and return $5,875 to the oper- ation each year; almonds cost $3,890 an acre to produce and return $5,000; and pistachios cost $4,984 an acre to produce and return $7,224. ly court domestic consumers. The Walnut Commission has invested more than $17 mil- lion in the last two years to boost U.S. sales. The goal is to increase walnut consump- tion from 22 to 30 percent of U.S. households. The Almond Board is also burnishing the industry’s im- age at home. Facing criticism from some quarters for its wa- ter use during the drought, the industry committed $2.1 mil- lion last year to research more sustainable farming practices such as whole-orchard recy- cling and groundwater bank- ing, and “is really upping the game in terms of precision agriculture for the industry,” Waycott said. Meanwhile, walnut farm- ers have begun switching to varieties such as Chandler, Howard and Tulare to get the highest yields and nut quality. To help them get the best pos- sible returns, farm advisers have been offering tips on pro- ducing higher-quality, lighter kernels by closely monitoring water use and applying a plant growth regulator. California unique Growers worried What makes California’s tree nut industries unique is they either dominate or own a large percentage of the world markets, so they’re heavily dependent on trade, said Eric Houk, director of the Agri- cultural Business Institute at California State Universi- ty-Chico. The state supplies 80 per- cent of the world’s almonds and 35-40 percent of the world’s walnuts and pista- chios, he said. With almonds, “weaker prices are not usually asso- ciated with increased foreign competition but a general de- crease in foreign demand” as production continues to rise, he said in an email. Walnut and pistachio growers face an increase in foreign competition, he said. With global markets in fl ux, the commodity groups have also begun to aggressive- Modesto area almond and walnut grower Paul Wenger, the California Farm Bureau Federation president since 2009, said he has long sus- pected the state was produc- ing more nuts than could be sustained in the long run. “A lot of the expansion we’re seeing in agricul- ture isn’t the typical family farmer — it’s pension funds and hedge fund investors,” Wenger said. “If they can get a 2 or 3 percent annualized return, they’re OK with that.” It will be interesting to see how family farmers can stand up against the institutional farm owners, he said. “I know down in the (San Joaquin) Valley we’ve got hedge funds drilling wells where family farmers would never do that. It’s a disposable dollar for a lot of these folks.” Lindauer, the Los Molinos walnut grower, said lower prices make it more diffi cult to meet increasing expenses, including the state-mandat- ed increase in the minimum wage to $15 an hour by 2022 and a new law applying the 8-hour work day to agricultur- al workers. After 8 hours, they will receive overtime pay. He said the new labor laws will force growers to “invest in enough machinery that we can get everything done in 8 hours that used to take 10 or 12.” “We can’t be doing this and losing money,” he said. At the same time, some farms that are heavily lever- aged may have a hard time surviving if prices stay low, said Rick Buchner, a UC Co- operative Extension farm ad- viser in Red Bluff. A few growers who plant- ed nuts in place of prunes a few years ago when that crop’s prices fell may turn around and plant more plums, Buchner said. Prune produc- ers had received an average of less than $1,000 per dry ton over the fi ve years ending in 2010, but that price shot up to $2,400 per dry ton in 2014. “The prune thing looks pretty promising now,” Buch- ner said. “I think we’re going to see some interest.” But Buchner and others also point out the price cycles the nut industries have expe- rienced. For instance, almond pric- es “peaked around 1995, then again around 2005, and most recently in 2015,” Chico State’s Houk said. Each time, the peak was followed by short-term lulls in planting and production, but the overall trend has been an increase in acreage and production and prices have recovered as global demand has increased, he said. “I think the industry is probably going to focus on in- creasing its marketing efforts and the lower prices will like- ly start increasing the quantity demanded in world markets,” Houk said. “When or if we get back to the peak prices we saw in 2015 is anybody’s guess.” Staying hopeful While he doesn’t see as much interest from investors now that prices are lower, UC Cooperative Extension po- mology farm Advisor Roger 2015* Alan Kenaga/Capital Press Duncan is still contacted al- most daily by growers who send him soil and water tests to determine if they can grow almonds, he said. “I think at this point, you still have to look at almond farming as a profi table busi- ness,” said Duncan, who is based in Modesto. “I don’t see any reason to believe ... it won’t continue to be that way. Where the ceiling is, I have absolutely no idea. “We’ve always felt like we’re approaching the ceil- ing,” he said. “Since then we’ve more than doubled the industry since I’ve been here.” For their part, industry leaders remain hopeful. The Walnut Commission’s Balint said the domestic market for walnuts rose by more than 11 percent this year because of a variety of factors, including lower prices. “So although I wouldn’t advise people to run out and plant more walnuts, I don’t think that we necessarily have what I would call a serious problem,” at least yet, Balint said. Over the past 20 years, the almond industry has “po- sitioned itself well” by pro- moting the image of nuts as a healthful food, the Almond Board’s Waycott said. “As we look out into the future, people have to eat and what should they be eating? Plant-based proteins are certainly preferred,” he said. “It’s going to be nutri- ent-dense products like ours that are going to be very much a part of the dietary mix, and you can’t grow them in many places.” Veronica Nigh, an econo- mist for the American Farm Bureau Federation, agrees. Tree nuts are “more of a foodie food” than many other commodities, and they’re an important part of many cul- tures around the world, partic- ularly in the Middle East, she said. “If you’ve been using al- monds in recipes for thou- sands of years, that’s not going anywhere,” Nigh said. “Just like anything else, we’re going to have some fl uctua- tions, but it’s certainly a good long-term market. “There’s still probably plenty of room for folks to get into the market and have a good business,” she said.