Rains, pests force world's top cotton producer India to import supplies
This confluence of extreme weather events brought on by climate change has sent cotton prices soaring by as much as 30%
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Photo: Bloomberg
Extreme weather is wreaking havoc upon virtually all of the world’s largest cotton suppliers.
In India, the top-producing country, heavy rains and pests have cut into cotton crops so much that the nation is importing supplies. A heat wave in China is raising concerns about the upcoming harvest there. In the US, the largest exporter of the commodity, a worsening drought is ravaging farms and is set to drag production to the lowest level in more than a decade. And now Brazil, the second-largest exporter, is battling extreme heat and drought that have already cut yields by nearly 30 per cent.
This confluence of extreme weather events brought on by climate change has sent cotton prices soaring by as much as 30 per cent. Earlier this year, they touched the highest level since 2011, squeezing the margins of clothing suppliers around the world and threatening to raise the costs of everything from t-shirts, to diapers, to paper and cardboard. In a call with investors earlier this week, Children’s Place CEO Jane Elfers described the surge in cotton prices as “a huge, huge problem for us” and said the company was hoping to see some relief in the second half of the year.
The outlook for Brazil is anything but helpful. The drought there has already dried up an estimated 200,000 metric tons of supply, according to Abrapa, a group representing growers. With the nation’s 2021-2022 harvest close to complete, production is now seen at 2.6 million tons -- or less.
In India, the top-producing country, heavy rains and pests have cut into cotton crops so much that the nation is importing supplies. A heat wave in China is raising concerns about the upcoming harvest there. In the US, the largest exporter of the commodity, a worsening drought is ravaging farms and is set to drag production to the lowest level in more than a decade. And now Brazil, the second-largest exporter, is battling extreme heat and drought that have already cut yields by nearly 30 per cent.
This confluence of extreme weather events brought on by climate change has sent cotton prices soaring by as much as 30 per cent. Earlier this year, they touched the highest level since 2011, squeezing the margins of clothing suppliers around the world and threatening to raise the costs of everything from t-shirts, to diapers, to paper and cardboard. In a call with investors earlier this week, Children’s Place CEO Jane Elfers described the surge in cotton prices as “a huge, huge problem for us” and said the company was hoping to see some relief in the second half of the year.
The outlook for Brazil is anything but helpful. The drought there has already dried up an estimated 200,000 metric tons of supply, according to Abrapa, a group representing growers. With the nation’s 2021-2022 harvest close to complete, production is now seen at 2.6 million tons -- or less.