Pandemic Leads to Idaho Potato Market Distress

Published online: Apr 27, 2020 Articles AP
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Source: YakTriNews

The coronavirus pandemic has caused a once-strong potato market to make an abrupt about-face, leading some Idaho growers to dump surplus spuds from storage cellars or to feed them to cattle.

Just a few weeks ago, Idaho potato farmers were enjoying some of their best fresh prices in recent memory and anticipated supplies would run short in the coming summer. The combination of lower spud yields and widespread frost damage during the 2019 harvest had contributed to a smaller statewide crop than normal, the Post Register reported Saturday.

The critical restaurant and food service market, however, has taken a dive due to stay-at-home orders amid the COVID-19 crisis. In response, potato processors have cut back on contracted acres with farmers, and fresh potato prices have plummeted, even as demand at grocery stores has been strengthened.

Idaho Farm Bureau Federation has sought to make large purchases of potatoes to help the state’s farmers while also providing badly needed food assistance to residents who have lost jobs because of the coronavirus crisis.A spokesman for the organization said all of the county Farm Bureaus in north Idaho have pitched in to purchase a semi-truck load of potatoes raised in eastern Idaho. About 1,100 50-pound bags of fresh potatoes will be shared among 18 food pantries in north Idaho.

Oakley farmer Ryan Cranney said his processor, McCain Foods, cut his contract for spud acres by 16%, and he’s also had to reduce his acreage of fresh spuds raised for Sun Valley Potatoes, based in Rupert, by 20%.

He’s shifting those acres to mustard seed, beans and irrigated pasture.

Cranney could have fed the surplus spuds to his cows, but he said the goodwill generated from throughout the world as a result of the gesture has been worth far more to his family and staff than the feed value of the crop. Within hours of making the post, a stream of traffic arrived, and the cars kept coming for the next five days.

“I didn’t think in a million years there would be that kind of reaction from people,” Cranney said. “We had several thousand people come out. A lot of them took eight, 10 or 12 bags apiece.”

Cranney said dairies are starting to feed potatoes to cattle — acquiring the spuds for roughly the cost to growers of transporting them — and he expects more growers will begin dumping spuds in the coming weeks.

Idaho farmers planted 315,000 acres of potatoes in 2019, according to USDA’s National Agricultural Statistics Service.