The effect of heavy August rain on eastern Idaho's malt barley crop
has been catastrophic, said Kelly Olson, administrator of the Idaho
Barley Commission, who was in eastern Idaho Tuesday through Thursday
touring the area. "We're looking at millions of dollars, perhaps high
millions, of lost economic value," she said.
The worst
case scenario would be for 60 percent of the malt barley crop to be
downgraded to feed, due to early sprouting in the mature but unharvested
malting barley crop. In the malting process, sprouting is highly
controlled in plants like the Anheuser-Busch and Intergrow facilities
south of Idaho Falls.
A downgrade from malt to feed
would cause the crop to lose roughly half its value. "We're losing more
and more of the quality than we thought we had," she said.
The
malting companies, which have contracted for certain quantities of malt
barley, will have to go somewhere else now, paying higher prices and
freight costs as well. The commission is hoping that at least some of
the crop can be salvaged and has issued guidelines for steps growers can
take. Commission Chairman Pat Purdy encourages barley producers who
need assistance or information to contact the IBC office in Boise at
208-334-2090 or in Idaho Falls at 208-569-6957.
The
southwestern monsoonal weather pattern is nothing unusual for August,
Olson said. What is unusual is it coming this far north. In a typical
year, the moisture from the Pacific hits Colorado and is deflected
eastward.
"No one has a good explanation for it," she
said. "It's just another example of the more extreme weather patterns
everybody seems to be experiencing."
Earlier this week
Jerome County commissioners sought emergency status after nine days of
rain caused hay and wheat to mold and barley fields to sprout, according
to a story
Wednesday in the Idaho Statesman. Between 50 and 70 percent of the
wheat, barley and alfalfa crops in Jerome County may have been lost,
according to estimates from the county's Office of Emergency Management.
Commissioners in neighboring Twin Falls County said they would seek an
emergency declaration as well.
Here is a link to today's National Weather Service forecast: Idaho Falls weather.