Innovations must sustain production
By Robert H. Wells
Delta Research and Extension Center
MISSISSIPPI STATE -- Cotton producers need technological innovations to
sustain profitable production in the United States, and a recent study
found Roundup Ready cotton, biotechnology and boll weevil eradication
are important contributors.
Mississippi State University collaborated with researchers from North
Carolina State University in Raleigh on the report that has a survey of
cotton growers from West Texas, Delta states and the Southeast. It also
includes interviews with cotton experts at the Beltwide Cotton
Conference in January 2007.
“Drought-resistant cotton, improved cotton varieties, and expanded weed
and insect control in the form of biotech traits are the most important
future innovations in the minds of the surveyed growers,” the report states.
The report shows the most important innovations in the history of U.S.
cotton and suggests innovations for the future.
Michele Marra, an NCSU professor and the report’s lead author, said the
information is relevant to the U.S. cotton industry’s current state.
“Because the cotton innovations named by those surveyed are, for the
most part, designed to reduce production costs, they are particularly
important in times of low prices,” Marra said. “Also, this information
coming from an unbiased third party could help guide the direction of
future funds for cotton research in many organizations and private firms.”
Steve Martin, the report’s second author and an agricultural economist
with the MSU Extension Service at the Delta Research and Extension
Center in Stoneville, said a point of interest is the high ranking
respondents gave boll weevil eradication. Eradication is a U.S.
Department of Agriculture program started in the 1970s that successfully
eliminated the boll weevil insect as a threat to cotton production in
many states.
“It’s been a major event in the last two decades,” Martin said. “Even
though there were concerns initially about the cost, producers feel like
boll weevil eradication has been a good investment and something that
needs to be maintained.”
Martin said respondents rarely cited global positioning system
technology high on their list of major cotton innovations.
“If we do this survey again in another 10 years, that response might
change,” Martin said. “The GPS technology is really just now beginning
to be accepted in cotton.”
Companies leading in cotton innovations are Monsanto, Bayer, Delta and
Pine Land, and Stoneville Pedigreed Seed, according to the report’s survey.
“A few of the experts interviewed at the 2007 Beltwide Cotton
Conference mentioned specifically that they think a combination of
Monsanto Company’s newest biotech traits with the Delta and Pine Land
Company’s best varieties would enhance Southern cotton growers’ yields
substantially,” the report states.
The U.S. Department of Justice approved a merger of the two companies
on May 31, with the condition that divestures take place. Monsanto owns
the rights to the highly popular Roundup Ready and Bollgard
biotechnology traits, while Delta and Pine Land offers popular seed
varieties.
U.S. cotton yields increased at about a 33 percent faster rate once
genetically modified, or transgenic, cotton arrived in the mid-1990s.
Cotton growers planted transgenic cotton varieties on 83 percent of U.S.
cotton acres in 2006.
Cotton producer Bernie Jordan, who farms in Yazoo and Humphreys
counties, said he would like to have more innovations in variable-rate
technology.
“I think we need to refine variable-rate fertilizer applications as
much as they can be refined because all of our fertilizer products have
escalated almost 100 percent in cost in the last year,” Jordan said.
“There has been a lot of work done with variable-rate lime, potash and
phosphate, but I think we need to concentrate on variable-rate nitrogen
because that is getting to be one of our highest inputs right now,” he said.
Jordan has farmed cotton for more than 27 years and provided his
opinions separately from the researchers’ report.
“Important Innovations in Cotton Production: An Assessment by U.S.
Cotton Growers and Other Experts” is available online at
http://www.cipm.info/cipmpubs/marra_cotton07.pdf.
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Released: June 14, 2007
Contact: Dr.Steve Martin (662) 686-3234
