Will Corn Farmers Go North?
Each year rising temperatures and dwindling water supplies will lead to the failure of increasing numbers of crops on farms across the globe. At a time of de-stabilizing climate change, the people who work the land, from small farmers eking out an existence to agribusiness giants pursuing profits, will have to find new ways of producing food.
Small farmers, though, ever at the mercy of the rain, often will lose everything along the way.
In Oaxaca, a state on the south-western coast of Mexico, primarily composed of poor indigenous groups, farmers are seeing their fortunes fall again after losing entire fields of corn in an important farming region, called Valles Centrales, at the center of the state.
Typically, corn growers in Oaxaca plant their seeds between April and May to take advantage of heavy rainfall during June. Indeed, it is the heavy rainfall during June which allows the seeds planted between April and May to sprout and, then, grow into mature plants.
But, in 2018, a change in the weather pattern has translated into a heavy loss for corn growers in Oaxaca, where a rainy season historically has extended from April until October of every year.
Mexico’s Total Agricultural Production (in tons)
2018 (forecast) versus 2017
Drought
More specifically, in June of 2018, a drought occurred at precisely the wrong time. The drought, which lasted for the entire month, as well as part of July, prevented farmers from irrigating their fields sufficiently during the most important stage of the growing season.
Because of the shortage of water in June, the seeds planted during the previous April and May did not grow into mature plants.
Today, in Oaxaca, while farmers are still counting their losses, governmental officials are saying that the state’s total corn production for 2018 will decrease by at least 20 percent versus its output for 2017 as a result of the large-scale crop failure.
Oaxaca’s total output of corn had reached almost 723,000 tons in 2016. In 2017, the state’s total corn production barely exceeded 700,000 tons.
So 2018 will be the third year in a row of decline. And what will next year, 2019, bring? If corn growers in Oaxaca continue to suffer heavy losses, they will have no choice: They will have to abandon their farms and go elsewhere to earn a living. They will go, most likely, to the United States, whether or not U.S. President Donald Trump welcomes them.
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[…] Today, changes in weather patterns across the globe, including southern Mexico, are causing heavy losses on farms and forcing farmers to make difficult decisions. If the people who work the land can’t find new ways of producing food, they will have to abandon their farms and go elsewhere to earn a living. […]
[…] In another district, San Pablo Huixtepec, which traditionally is the most productive farming region of the central valleys, officials estimate that a lack of rain has led to the ruin of 80 percent of farmers’ crops. […]