Return to Virginia Business - November 2001

Hard times in the land of cotton

Wish you were in the land of cotton? You are, but maybe not for long.

After a 70-year hiatus, cotton growing had really taken off in Virginia. In the last decade, crop acreages have increased twenty-fold from 5,000 acres to 100,000 acres. Fields stretch from Dinwiddie County east to the ocean. In mid-October, seas of white covered fields alongside U.S. 460 in Suffolk, making bits of the Old South look really southern once again.

Unlike North Carolina, however, where cotton's resurgence to 1 million acres is meant to replace tobacco, most of Virginia's cotton is not grown in tobacco areas. Cotton is a cash crop in Virginia, and its comeback is a significant event in the state's agricultural history, especially when subsidiary industries such as cotton gins and processing units are considered, says Spencer Neale, senior assistant director of commodities for the Virginia Farm Bureau.

How long farmers can remain in high cotton remains to be seen, however. Neale notes that cotton was hugely profitable just five years ago. At that time, prices reached a healthy 80 cents per pound. Today they have dropped to low 30 cents-per-pound levels, cutting seriously into farmers' pocketbooks.

The low prices have especially impacted Virginia's Eastern Shore where 5,000 acres are grown, says Jim Stern, general manager of Shore Gin & Cotton Inc in Melfa. Stern doesn't see any improvement in global cotton prices anytime soon. If not, farmers will once again dump the crop-proving that when it comes to cotton, old times can be easily forgotten.

- Peter Galuszka

Return to Virginia Business - November 2001