Industry News & Reports

  • Agencies Race to Fix Plans to Sustain Groundwater Levels

    Seeking to prevent the California State Water Resources Control Board from stepping in to regulate groundwater in critically overdrafted subbasins, local agencies are working to correct deficiencies in their plans to protect groundwater.

    5/1/24

  • Bearing Almond Acreage Drops Slightly – First Time in Decades

    California’s bearing almond acreage decreased slightly over the past year, according to a new report from Land IQ to the Almond Board of California (ABC). It is the first time since at least 1995 that the total of bearing acres has not grown.

    4/26/24

  • Land-Use Bill Taps Farmland for Solar Sites

    Roughly half of California’s 30 million acres of farmland is protected from development by the California Land Conservation Act of 1965. Proposed state legislation to modify California’s longstanding farmland conservation law could pave the way for large swaths of farm acreage to be repurposed as sites for renewable energy projects.

    4/17/24

  • California Acts to Halt Kings County’s Groundwater Overpumping

    State officials, for the first time, put a local groundwater basin on probation to stop overuse. The order triggers hefty fees and mandatory reporting of well use.

    4/16/24

  • Delayed Marketings Bolster Cattle Feeders’ Bargaining Position

    Cattle feeders are delaying marketings to allow cattle time to recover. This has started the seasonal spring rally and added resolve to feeders asking higher prices.

    4/10/24

  • Margins Improve, but Not Enough to Spur Milk Production Growth

    Margins are improving with lower feed costs, and new plants under construction are looking for milk supply. However, high expansion costs, expensive replacement heifers, and enticing beef-on-dairy cross revenues continue to hold back production growth at the national level.

    3/30/24

  • Assessing the Current Almond Market Environment

    Values for almond orchards in California are falling significantly as a result of an extended period of continued low almond prices, poor yields, input cost pressures, and higher interest rates.

    3/26/24

  • Winescape Spring 2024

    Dissects wine market data for the crucial fourth quarter, reviews initial grape crush results and takes a hard look at the supply-demand imbalance in the grape market.

    3/14/24

  • Majority of U.S. Cows Live on Big Dairies

    The USDA Census of Agriculture provides a breakdown of dairy operations by size in key milk-producing states. The number of U.S. dairies with more than 2,500 cows climbed to 834 in 2022, an increase of 17% from five years earlier.

    3/13/24

  • Additional $205 Million in Funding for Sites Reservoir

    Congress has given the green light for a significant boost to the Sites Reservoir Project, based on a recommendation from the Bureau of Reclamation. A total of $205.6 million in federal funds is being allocated.

    3/13/24

  • How California's Budget Mess May Harm Agriculture

    California is currently in the throes of a budget mess—and that isn’t good news for the state’s critical agriculture sector. This year, the state is facing a $38 billion budget deficit that is expected to worsen. This is on top of a $31 billion fiscal deficit in 2023.

    3/13/24

  • Farms Cut Tomato Acres, Await Price as Planting Starts

    California farmers delivered one of the state’s largest tomato crops in recent years to processors last year. With bolstered inventory, processors contracted less tomato acreage from farms this year.

    3/13/24

  • Sinking Canal Could Put Entire Tule Subbasin Under State Control

    Fallout over the ever sinking Friant-Kern Canal could affect growers throughout the Tule subbasin regardless of whether they get water from the canal.

    3/7/24

  • Growers Scrap Vineyards as Market Dims

    A once-in-a-generation downturn in the wine market is reshaping California’s grape-growing regions as farmers tear out vines to rebalance supply with declining demand.

    3/6/24

  • Are the New Groundwater Management Plans Being Watered Down by Weak Monitoring Methods?

    Questioning SGMA's effectiveness at reducing water extractions by measuring evapotranspiration and not actual applications.

    3/1/24

  • Number of Farms Continues to Drop in State and Nation

    Small-scale farmers continue to struggle to stay in business in California and across the country, according to the results of the 2022 Census of Agriculture, which was released earlier this month by the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

    2/28/24

  • Are Better Days Ahead for the U.S. Almond Industry?

    Has the latest downturn in U.S. almond prices bottomed out, or are there still significant headwinds facing an industry capable of overproduction?

    2/21/24

  • 2023 California Grape Crush Preliminary Report

    The 2023 crush totaled 3,728,923 tons, up 1.6% from the 2022 crush of 3,670,861 tons. Red wine varieties accounted for the largest share of all grapes crushed, at 1,959,024 tons, up 2.3% from 2022. White wine varieties crushed totaled 1,709,270 tons, up 15.3% from 2022. Tons crushed of raisin type varieties totaled 43,621, down 58.9% from 2022, and tons crushed of table type varieties totaled 17,008, down 89.9% from 2022.

    2/9/24

  • Shrinking Supply of Dairy Heifers May Limit Growth of U.S. Milk Production

    A sharp decline in the number of dairy heifers available to replace older cows exiting the U.S. dairy herd could limit any meaningful growth in domestic milk production over the next few years.

    2/7/24

  • Where Do Walnuts Go From Here?

    Many growers in the Central Valley have removed walnut orchards in recent years as the industry confronts a variety of headwinds. The walnut industry’s unique challenges, combined with headwinds facing agriculture in the state more broadly, are likely to flatten California production and pricing going forward.

    2/6/24

  • Addressing Groundwater Overdraft in the Sacramento Valley

    While the problem is far less acute than in the drier San Joaquin Valley to the south, many basins have issues to address. In this post, we explore how the plans envisage bringing their basins into balance.

    12/11/23

  • California Pushes Ahead With $16 Billion Water Project

    Gov. Gavin Newsom’s office is pressing forward with one of California’s most contentious water projects of the past half century, as it released a completed environmental review of the proposed 45-mile tunnel beneath the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta.

    12/8/23

  • 2023 Standing Almond Acreage

    This estimate is the result of extensive ground truthing and advanced remote sensing analytics to differentiate almond orchards from other tree and annual crops.

    11/21/23

  • Priorities for California's Water

    This policy brief examines how California’s water sector managed the unusually wet conditions of the 2023 water year and outlines priorities for action, drawing on discussions with experts from around the state.

    11/2/23

  • Is Agrivoltaics Right for California?

    Agrivoltaics—the practice of using the same piece of land simultaneously for agriculture and solar power generation—has enjoyed a lot of positive press lately.

    10/3/23

  • Managing Water and Farmland Transitions in the San Joaquin Valley

    Successful implementation of the 2014 Sustainable Groundwater Management Act is vital to the long-term health of the San Joaquin Valley’s communities, agriculture, environment, and economy.

    9/15/23

  • 2023 California Almond Objective Measurement Report

    California's 2023 almond production is forecast at 2.60 billion meat pounds, up 4% from May's subjective forecast and 1% higher than last year's crop of 2.57 billion meat pounds. The forecast is based on 1.38 million bearing acres.

    7/12/23