Picking has begun in most of Australia’s cotton growing region with positive signs emerging that the flooding and farm damage late last year may not have been as devastating as first feared, aided by dryer and warmer conditions since Christmas.
While the impact varied from state to state and region to region, some farmers were forced to scale back their plantings, particularly in the Southern and Macquarie Valleys where farmers couldn’t get onto their paddocks, missing their planting window.
Cotton Australia CEO Adam Kay said with favourable conditions across most of areas growing cotton this year, growers are reassessing yield and quality.
“To appreciate where we are now you first have to acknowledge where we were. Last November every inland river catchment was full or flooded from the Queensland border to Victoria and around 100 active warnings were in place.”
One area impacted by the wet weather is the Southern Valleys where defoliation is just starting after late planting. Wet weather at the planting stage resulted in a one-third reduction in crop planted.
In the Macquarie Valley, picking is underway north of Warren after farmers also reported a 30% crop reduction due to the well-above rain recorded in 2022. Mr Kay said the upside is that quality is expected to be good, and above average temperatures in February and March have provided very good boll filling conditions for crops.
“In the Gwydir Valley early dryland is being picked and yielding up to 7 bales per hectare with around double that for irrigated cotton. The cotton not impacted by spray drift is around the 14 bales per hectare.
“Picking was well underway in the Gwydir in April and had also begun in the Namoi and Upper Namoi and had just started in Walgett and Bourke where yield predictions were difficult, particularly in drift impacted areas.
“In the Macintyre Valley, 44,000ha irrigated cotton and 8,000ha dryland has been planted with activity hitting full capacity in the last week of April. While the dryland cotton could have used some late rain, the irrigated is looking very positive. While the gins were not yet operational the cotton being delivered is looking to be high quality.”
Picking was also in full swing in St George, Dirranbandi and Mungindi with the majority of the early crop to be picked over late April/early May and later crops almost a month away from picking.
“Growers are reporting good yields and quality and while early indications are good, ginners were only just starting so there weren’t any results to confirm the optimistic outlook at this stage.”
Mr Kay said Darling Downs growers were up to the defoliation stage at the end of April and a few had started picking the early planted fields. Due to full storages and full water allocations at the beginning of the season as well as a full soil moisture profile, larger than average areas were planted, around 75% irrigated fields and 25% rain-fed. Gins were predicting they would start full operation in the second week of May.
“In the Lockyer Valley, 10 growers planted approximately 1500 ha of cotton and that’s up from previous years driven by price, crop rotation practices and growing conditions. At Maryborough three growers have planted 500 ha.
“In the Central Highlands both gins are operational with the cotton clean but no yield information as at April, however up to 13 bales per ha irrigated were reported in early crops. A number of growers are still irrigating and will push through until June picking.”
Mr Kay said Cotton Australia was forecasting a crop around 5.2 million bales for 2023. “This will result in around 1.2 million tonnes of fibre and 1.4 million tonnes of cottonseed.
“Every bale of cotton and every tonne of seed will be sold, given the demand for the Australian grown product. The Murray Darling Basin Authority reports that the major water storages in the basin are at around 90% capacity, meaning the outlook for the next season is positive as well.
“It’s good news for local communities because figures from the Australian Bureau of Statistics 2021 Agricultural Census revealed that cotton was grown in 65 local government areas with more than 75 per cent of cotton grower business expenses spent locally,” Mr Kay said.