U.S. disaster aid won't
cover crops drowned by Midwest floods
Reuters
by Tom Polansek
The USDA has no mechanism to compensate farmers for damaged crops in storage,
Northey said, a problem never before seen on this scale. That’s in part because
U.S. farmers have never stored so much of their harvests, after years of
oversupplied markets, low prices and the latest blow of lost sales from the
U.S. trade war with China - previously their biggest buyer of soybean exports.
The USDA last year made $12 billion in aid available to farmers who suffered
trade-war losses, without needing Congressional approval. The agency has
separate programs that partially cover losses from cattle killed in natural
disasters, compensate farmers who cannot plant crops due to weather, and help
them remove debris left in fields after floods.
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