Excellent article by my colleague and FCStone Fibers and Textiles' Chief Economist, Gary Raines
According to the latest planting intentions survey from China’s National Cotton Market Monitoring System (NCMMS), Chinese cotton farmers are likely to sow an additional 2.6% more land to cotton next spring than was planted this year. The NCMMS survey suggests acreage changes will vary substantially from one province to another, with some regions seeing double-digit declines, while others may increase at a double-digit rate. Plantings in North China, or the Yellow River area, are forecast at 31.6 million mu (5.2 million acres), down -3.0% from this past spring. The area around Shandong area is likely to increase 1.1%, while producers in the provinces of Henan, Hebei, Shanxi and Shaanxi reported anticipated declines of -5.6%, -6.3%, -11.4% and -19.9%, respectively.
Closer to the coast, cotton plantings in East China, or the Yangtze River Valley are projected to uniformly rise across each province in the region. At 21.7 million mu (3.6 million acres), total areas sown to cotton is projected to be up 6.5% from 2009. Acreage in Jiangsu, Hunan, Hubei, Anhui and Jiangxi is set to increase 11.7%, 9.5%, 7.3%, 1.5% and 3.1% respectively. Producers in these provinces cited a number of factors behind their pending switch away from cotton. In particular, farmers complained about 1) lower returns on cotton due to unfavorable weather impacting yield and a fast cotton delivery from growers to merchants before cotton rally; 2) lower returns compared to other crops, and 3) changing planting methods after a few years of crop losses, especially in Henan, that resulted in lower profitability.
The cotton area in the Northwest is forecast at 26.4 million mu (4.3 million mu), up 6.8% from this past spring. Xinjiang area will surge 7.1% and Gansu will see a modest increase of less than 0.1%. Producers said the increased planting intention in some provinces primarily is due to steadily higher seed cotton prices and a difficult season producing competitive crops.
Closer to the coast, cotton plantings in East China, or the Yangtze River Valley are projected to uniformly rise across each province in the region. At 21.7 million mu (3.6 million acres), total areas sown to cotton is projected to be up 6.5% from 2009. Acreage in Jiangsu, Hunan, Hubei, Anhui and Jiangxi is set to increase 11.7%, 9.5%, 7.3%, 1.5% and 3.1% respectively. Producers in these provinces cited a number of factors behind their pending switch away from cotton. In particular, farmers complained about 1) lower returns on cotton due to unfavorable weather impacting yield and a fast cotton delivery from growers to merchants before cotton rally; 2) lower returns compared to other crops, and 3) changing planting methods after a few years of crop losses, especially in Henan, that resulted in lower profitability.
The cotton area in the Northwest is forecast at 26.4 million mu (4.3 million mu), up 6.8% from this past spring. Xinjiang area will surge 7.1% and Gansu will see a modest increase of less than 0.1%. Producers said the increased planting intention in some provinces primarily is due to steadily higher seed cotton prices and a difficult season producing competitive crops.

