Forbes: U.S. Farmers Struggle Through Drought To Bring Food To The Table But Face More Challenges Ahead

Forbes: U.S. Farmers Struggle Through Drought To Bring Food To The Table But Face More Challenges Ahead Main Photo

2 Sep 2022


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Lack of summer rain forced Nebraska farmer Kevin Fulton to go underground to find water for his crops. Not a perfect solution: the Ogallala Aquifer, where Fulton tapped in, has pumping restrictions in some areas, just not where Fulton is located. That’s because the aquifer is running dry.

As drought extends its deadly fingers from California to the eastern side of the Mississippi River — a vast stretch of the continent that produces most of America’s food, including three-quarters of its beef cattle and 70% of its vegetables, fruits and nuts — farmers and ranchers are facing a double whammy. They have to go farther to find water and higher fuel costs are forcing them to pay more to pump whatever isn’t coming from the sky. That predicament is still better than what’s happened to the land that’s not irrigated, Fulton says.

Click here to view the original article from Forbes.