Hurricane Harvey Causes $200M in Ag Losses

Months after Hurricane Harvey dumped feet of rain on Houston and Texas, economists with the Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service are totaling up the damages caused by the summer storm, now believed to be a combined $200 million between livestock, hay, feed, cotton, rice and soybeans.

Cotton Modules Destroyed by Hurricane Harvey
Cotton Modules Destroyed by Hurricane Harvey
(Texas Farm Bureau)

Months after Hurricane Harvey dumped feet of rain on Houston and Texas, economists with the Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service are totaling up the damages caused by the summer storm, now believed to be a combined $200 million between livestock, hay, feed, cotton, rice and soybeans.

Cotton was the hardest hit crop, totaling $100 million in losses. An estimated 200,000 bales of cotton lint on the stalk was lost, valued at $62 million. An additional 200,00 harvested bales had degraded quality and are valued at $9.6 million.

The flooding also caused cattle to drown after farmers and ranchers were unable to save them. A&M believes those losses coupled with destroyed infrastructure, like fencing and hay, to be at $93 million.

“The effects of Hurricane Harvey will linger for quite some time with our Texas farmers and ranchers,” said Doug Steele, agency director of AgriLife Extension, in a statement.

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