The economic crisis caused by the coronavirus pandemic has slammed broadside against the Washington dairy and potato industries, with both facing the prospect of dumping product because markets have disappeared.
Restaurants have mostly shut down, which eliminated a major market for processed potatoes. That includes everything from instant mashed potatoes to french fries. As a result, Washington growers have 1 billion pounds of potatoes in storage with no place to sell them, said Chris Voigt, executive director of the Washington State Potato Commission.
"That's a lot of potatoes," Voigt said. "Every man, woman and child in Washington state would have to eat 200 pounds of potatoes between now and the Fourth of July."
Producers actually have 3 billion pounds in storage, but about 70 percent of all potatoes grown in Washington are exported. So far, those exports have remained strong. "But we are estimating that 1 billion pounds will not be used," Voigt said.
Washington dairy producers are also being hammered by a drop in prices after restaurant and school closures took away a major portion of their demand. Prices had increased in January to about $17 per 100 pounds of milk. May futures are quoting about $11, which is about $5 below the cost of production, said Case VanderMeulen, owner of Coulee Flats Dairy near Mesa, Washington.
VanderMeulen's 7,000 dairy cows produce about 600,000 pounds of milk per day, which means he stands to lose about $30,000 daily at the expected May price of about $11 per 100 pounds.