Nitrogen Costs, Soybean Seed Challenge Crop Planters JOYCE BUPP York Co. Correspondent YORK (York Co.) Think rolling energy blackouts in Cali fornia have no impact on the East Coast farming community? Think again. As natural gas prices have es calated across the country, ener gy producers are scrambling for supplies. One place they reportedly ob tained scarce natural gas is from firms which normally use gas to produce nitrogen fertilizers. As a result, suppliers warn that nitrogen production is down this spring and costs have blasted sky-high. Some area growers have al ready bought their spring needs of nitrogen. Some are looking at alternatives, such as sources of manure. Some are simply plan ning to use less, or none at all. “Nitrogen is the bone in the craw of producers this year,” said George Williams, owner of Codorus Fertilizer Service in southwestern York County. “Costs are being driven by ener gy, especially natural gas, which is the first item you start with in the nitrogen production cycle.” Williams concurs with recent news reports, that some large do mestic producers of nitrogen fer tilizer have resold their supplies of natural gas to help fill energy production demands. “Worldwide, there is less ni trogen being manufactured be cause it was not real profitable in the past. A lot of plants were shut down and manufacturers need a couple of months lead time to gear' them back up,” said the fertilizer ,supplier. While thire has been some * x. '*■ . V ■m. \-n.n * 9 wjr ».•*. wjw j*/9 9.w. w * «I speculation among farmers that the nitrogen shortage is contrived to generate higher profits for manufacturers, Williams sees it as a genuine supply-demand problem. That crunch shows no signs of quick improvement, es pecially heading into the upcom ing months when planting puts a heavy demand on nationwide stocks of nitrogen. According to Williams, urea fertilizer price one year, ago was running about $l6O per ton. A ton of the high-nitrogen dry urea will cost growers upward of $265 per ton. Urea is a 46 percent ni trogen product, supplying 920 pounds of nitrogen per ton, or 2,000 pounds of material. Liquid nitrogen, by compari son, is a 30 percent material pro viding 600 pounds of actual ni trogen per ton. Costs of liquid nitrogen have comparably climbed, from a February 2000 cost of $llO-115 per ton to a re cent quote in the $lB5-190 range. Exploding nitrogen costs was an issue on the minds of growers attending the annual York County corn clinic earlier this month. The father-son partnership of John Marstellar, Sr. and Jr., Stewartstown, who raise 800 acres of com, got a little ahead of the cost curve on their spring supplies of nitrogen. Aware that the price was on a serious up swing, the Marstellars not only bought ahead, they also added extra on-farm storage for their nitrogen needs. Fawn Grove area grower Bob Morris has also laid in his spring order of nitrogen. He related vis iting with another producer who was on the search for supplies of poultry manure to replace high- cost nitrogen fertilizer. “I’ll cut back, probably about 25 percent, if prices stay high,” said Don Glatfelter, Mount Wolf. Galtfelter, who raises about 125 acres of com and 100 of soy beans, figures that is will take a better price for com than the cur rent level before he could justify upping his nitrogen use any more. Rodney Eisenhart, Thom asville, plans to minimize nitro gen needs by growing his com in former soybean fields. Not a new plan for Eisenhart, the rotation pattern just continues a program he has used in prior years. Like many York area farmers, Eisen hart has recently lost some rent ed acreage to urban sprawl, also cutting his cash layout for nitro gen in this high-cost year. Dairyman Henry Dehoff, Dal lastown, may cut back nitrogen use, but no more than 10 percent. He is concerned, however, that the short supplies may prevent their family dairy operation from getting all the nitrogen they might want for the 500 acres they normally plant, even with slightly reduced application rates. Manure availability is a boon for farmers raising livestock or poultry since, such as Airville dairy producer Harry Bickel. They can supplement added ni trogen with applications of natu ral fertilizer. Brian Baer, across the county at Glen Rock, figures on doing the same with barnyard buildup from the family’s beef cattle herd. “We’ll be pretty careful with it,” said retired dairyman Bob Stewart, Airville, summing up the general feeling about nitro gen applications in the 2001 growing season voiced by most growers attending the crop clinic. York extension agronomist Mark Goodson has encouraged corn growers, if possible, to split their nitrogen applications. Put some down as a seedling-starter boost, then come back in when corn is ready to make its big growth push in mid-summer with a sidedressing, if possible. Since nitrogen very readily leaches out of the soil and into the environment, including groundwater, splitting applica tions is doubly beneficial. Not only does it give the crop a dou ble-whammy of nutrient, it does it in smaller amounts, less likely to go to waste. Also, costs of ni trogen are expected to take somewhat of a drop once the spring planting season is past, al lowing later applications at a lower impute cost. “A lot of our clients say they may cut back in nitrogen appli cation,” said ag lender John Eaton of Peoples’ Bank. “Levels of nitrogen in many fields in the area are pretty good, since it’s been fairly inexpensive in the past. And, some say they’ll switch to planting soybeans in stead.” Even that plan, warns Cordo rus Fertilizer’s Williams, may have its pitfalls this year. “There’s a definite shortage of soybean seed this year,” he said. “Seed beans would have been short this year, even without more farmers planting beans in stead of com.” Poor conditions at harvest, with prolonged wet weather in many cases, left the outer skin of soybean seeds more thin and del icate than usual. That thinness will cause the coats to crack and Lancaster Farming, Saturday, March 3,2001-A23 the seeds shatter more readily than normal, resulting in re duced germination rates. Those likely low germination rates, cou pled with a short supply, are combining to aggravate the situa tion. And, Williams said, soybean seeds are rated according to planting length, from the short er-season beans used in Canada and New England to much long er-length season beans such as might be planted in Virginia. And the “Group 3” bean, proba bly the most-popular, season length seed for the middle-Atlan tic region, seems to be one of the shortest in availability. While longer-season beans will grow and mature under normal middle-Atlantic growing condi tions, Williams advises that they absolutely need to be planted early to take advantage of the entire growing season and ma ture completely. Couple the lower germination rate with fewer seed beans to begin with, and farmers are look ing at a shortage of the seed they might readily switch to in order to avoid the high nitrogen im pute costs for corn acres. With possible shortages of high-priced nitrogen and less abundant supplies of lower-ger mination soybeans, area farmers find their own ways to deal with the particular set of challenges the 2001 crop year offers. “If the weather delays plant ing in the southern states and the whole East Coast opens up at the same time, we could have a real problem,” said Williams. “If planting season is normal, we’ll probably be okay. I’m afraid no one has a real handle on what’s happening.”