Peanut shortage sending peanut butter prices up

ATLANTA (AP) - Consumers should be prepared to shell out a bit more for peanut butter soon.

Another hot, dry summer in key producing states and competition from more profitable crops like cotton have significantly shrunk the U.S. peanut crop this year. The tight supply means consumers will soon pay more for yet another grocery staple.

U.S. farmers are expected to produce roughly 1.8 million tons of peanuts in the U.S. this year, down nearly 13 percent from last year, according to a survey released Wednesday by the Department of Agriculture. Assuming that estimate holds, it would be smallest harvest recorded since 2006.

Peanut butter producers already have plans to hike prices for peanut butter significantly in the next few weeks. Those who package nuts for snacks say they are watching their competitors to determine whether price hikes will be necessary.

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Associated Press

In this image from NASA Television Expedition 16 flight engineer Dan Tani is seen during a spacewalk outside the International Space Station, Wednesday.

The J.M. Smucker Co., which makes Jif peanut butter, plans to raise its wholesale prices 30 percent in November. Kraft Foods Co., which launched its Planters peanut butter in June, is raising prices 40 percent on Oct. 31. A spokesperson for ConAgra Foods Inc., which makes Peter Pan peanut butter, was not immediately available to comment but multiple media outlets report that the company plans to raise its prices as well.

Unilever, which makes Skippy brand peanut butter, would not comment specifically on its pricing but said the company is watching the commodities market very closely and will make pricing adjustments as needed.

"It's been a tough season, it sure has," said Rodney Dawson, a farmer in Hawkinsville, Ga.

Like many farmers, Dawson found at the start of the planting season that he could make more money growing corn and cotton than peanuts. As a result, he and other U.S. growers cut back on planting peanuts.

A miserable drought and scorching temperatures followed in key peanut-producing states like Georgia and Texas. For some farmers this was the second hot summer in a row.

Peanut farmers had to delay planting this spring because of the heat, which cut their production. Others saw the plants they'd put in the ground scorch during the summer when the shoots, which poke back into the ground to produce the peanut seed, burned as they touched the hot soil.

Georgia, the largest peanut-producing state in the country, saw record-breaking heat and a lack of rainfall that prevented some peanut seeds from even germinating in the field. Other plants that did grow were baked in the hot summer sun, producing poor-quality nuts or sometimes nothing at all.

Dawson was able to irrigate his farm to produce peanuts. In the dry corners where water didn't reach, however, he said his crop yielded about a quarter of his irrigated areas. And his profits were eroded by the cost of burning pricey fuel to run the irrigation system.

In a mean twist of irony, Dawson and his neighbor, farmer David Bishop, finally got rain as they were harvesting. It was not enough to salvage much of Bishop's crop. The vast majority of his 300 acres of peanuts are planted on land without an irrigation system.

"It's too little, too late," Bishop said. "We needed this rain back in July and August."

A farmer for three decades, Bishop said he had never seen a drought as severe at this year's. It took about three weeks to get his plants out of the ground, three times as long as normal.

"It was so dry you didn't have any moisture in the soil to make the seed even rot," he said. "It just laid there in the soil. I've never seen that before."

Farmers typically sell their crop to shellers and negotiate those pricing contracts ahead of time, allowing them to decide how much crop to plant.

But according to USDA estimates this week, farmers who had runner peanuts - the most common kind and the type used for peanut butter - they could sell their crop for nearly $1,200 a ton, up from nearly $450 a ton last year.

While it's a devastating season for farmers, it's tough on consumers too as they've seen a run-up in the cost of groceries from coffee to cereal on higher commodity costs over the past year.

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