2026-04-01 16:47:11 UTC / 路透社
作者:汤姆·波兰塞克
2026年4月1日 格林威治标准时间下午4:47 更新于3小时前
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美国印第安纳州罗奇代尔的一块田地里正在收割玉米,2019年10月29日摄。路透社/布莱恩·伍尔斯顿 资料照片
- 美国农业部发布首次基于调查的美国作物种植面积预估
- 伊朗战争推高玉米种植所需化肥的价格
- 分析师称此次调查未完全反映战争影响
- 分析师表示美国农业部或在后续下调玉米种植面积预估
芝加哥,3月31日(路透社)——美国农业部称,由于伊朗战争推高化肥和燃油价格,给本就陷入困境的农业 sector 带来最新打击,美国农民计划在2026年比去年减少玉米种植面积,增加大豆种植面积。
该机构周二在一份前瞻性种植报告中发布了本年度首次基于调查的作物种植面积预估,同时发布了美国季度谷物库存数据。
路透社伊朗局势简报新闻通讯将为您提供伊朗战争的最新动态和分析。点击此处订阅。
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分析师警告称,此次种植面积预估基于3月上半月开展的农民调查,未能完全涵盖战争带来的 disruptions 和价格影响。他们表示,美国农业部可能会进一步下调玉米种植面积预估。
多年来,美国农业部一直难以吸引农民回应调查,此前该机构对2025年作物玉米种植面积预估进行了前所未有的上调,因此今年其数据的可靠性遭到了批评。美国农业部国家农业统计服务部门在X平台上表示,此次3月农业调查的回复率为37.6%,低于去年的44.3%,为该调查有记录以来的最低水平。
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“受化肥市场现状影响,再加上调查开展的时机,这可能是今年我们看到的玉米种植面积预估的最高值,”Teucrium Trading董事总经理兼高级投资组合专家杰克·汉利说道。
玉米和小麦需要成本更高的化肥,因此与大豆相比,种植它们对种植者的吸引力更低。当前美以针对伊朗的战争切断了海湾地区向全球农民供应的关键氮肥。
化肥成本飙升是农民面临的最新障碍,他们此前还要应对谷物价格疲软、其他投入成本上涨以及中国对美国农产品需求的不确定性。去年特朗普政府发起的贸易战严重扰乱了美国向全球最大进口国中国的大豆出口销售。
农民面临的障碍
美国农业部称,农民今年计划种植9533.8万英亩玉米,低于2025年的9878.8万英亩;计划种植8470万英亩大豆,高于去年的8121.5万英亩。
分析师预计,伊朗冲突带来的 disruptions 将进一步抑制玉米种植面积。路透社的一项民意调查显示,分析师预估玉米种植面积为9437.1万英亩,大豆种植面积为8554.9万英亩。
美国农业部公布的大豆种植面积预估低于市场预期,推动大豆期货上涨。
美国农业部数据显示,今年小麦种植面积为4377.5万英亩,低于去年的4532.8万英亩,为1919年有记录以来的最低水平。分析师此前预估为4478.6万英亩。
美国中西部大部分农民种植玉米和大豆,每年轮换在每块田地上种植的作物以保持土壤健康。如果种植者认为能获得更高利润或减少亏损,部分耕地可以打破传统轮作模式。
尽管政府援助款项接近历史高位,但美国农业净收入预计今年将出现下滑,这标志着农业利润紧张、生产成本高企和大宗商品价格低迷的状况已连续第四年持续。
谷物库存上升
农业组织已敦促国会批准向作物种植者提供额外援助,因为伊朗战争的余波正在冲击更广泛的经济。唐纳德·特朗普总统的政府已经在向农民发放120亿美元援助,此前他与中国的贸易争端损害了美国大豆销售。
美国农业部称,截至3月1日,美国玉米、大豆和小麦的库存较去年同期有所增加,反映出去年丰收以及贸易 disruptions 后供应充足。
截至3月1日,美国玉米库存达到90.24亿蒲式耳,高于去年同期的81.47亿蒲式耳,也高于分析师预估的91.04亿蒲式耳。
充足的库存对作物农民的价格构成压力,但也降低了畜牧生产商和生物燃料制造商的成本。
“目前玉米供应充足,”汉利说,“但目前所有因素都在表明,未来价格上涨的风险正在积聚。”
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US farmers to plant less corn as Iran war spikes fertilizer prices
2026-04-01 16:47:11 UTC / Reuters
By Tom Polansek
April 1, 2026 4:47 PM UTC Updated 3 hours ago
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Corn is harvested from a field in Roachdale, Indiana, U.S. October 29, 2019. REUTERS/Bryan Woolston/File Photo
- USDA publishes first survey-based US plantings estimates
- Iran war hikes prices for fertilizer needed for planting corn
- Analysts say survey does not fully reflect war impact
- USDA may cut corn planting estimate later, analysts say
CHICAGO, March 31 (Reuters) – U.S. farmers plan to plant less corn and more soybeans in 2026 than last year, the U.S. Department of Agriculture said, as the Iran war drives up fertilizer and fuel prices in the latest blow to the struggling agricultural sector.
The agency published on Tuesday its first survey-based crop acreage estimate of the year in a prospective plantings report, along with quarterly U.S. grain stocks data.
The Reuters Iran Briefing newsletter keeps you informed with the latest developments and analysis of the Iran war. Sign up here.
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Analysts cautioned that plantings estimates, gleaned from farmer surveys conducted in the first half of March, could not fully account for disruptions and price impacts caused by the war. As a result, the agency may further reduce its estimate for corn acreage, they said.
USDA, which has struggled for years to get farmers to respond to surveys, faced criticism over the reliability of its data this year after making unprecedented increases to corn acreage estimates for the 2025 crop. The response rate to its March agricultural survey was 37.6%, down from 44.3% last year and the lowest for that survey, the agency’s National Agricultural Statistics Service said on X.
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“Because of what’s happening in the fertilizer market, and the timing of when the survey went out, this is probably the highest number in planted acreage we’ll see in corn this year,” said Jake Hanley, managing director and senior portfolio specialist at Teucrium Trading.
Corn and wheat require more costly fertilizer, making them less attractive for growers to plant than soybeans with the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran cutting off critical nitrogen supplies from the Gulf to the world’s farmers.
Spiking fertilizer costs are the latest hurdle for farmers grappling with weak grain prices, rising bills for other inputs and uncertainty over China’s demand for U.S. crops. A trade war launched by the Trump administration last year dramatically disrupted U.S. soybean export sales to China, the world’s largest importer.
HURDLES FOR FARMERS
Farmers intend to plant 95.338 million acres of corn this year, down from 98.788 million acres in 2025, and 84.7 million acres of soybeans, up from 81.215 million acres last year, USDA said.
Analysts expected disruptions from the Iran conflict to curb corn acreage even further. They pegged corn plantings at 94.371 million acres in a Reuters poll and soybean plantings at 85.549 million acres.
USDA’s lower-than-expected estimate for soy acres rallied soybean futures .
For wheat, farmers planted 43.775 million acres for harvest this year, which was down from 45.328 million acres last year and the lowest since records began in 1919, USDA data showed. Analysts expected 44.786 million acres.
Most Midwest farmers grow corn and soybeans, alternating what is planted on each field every year to preserve soil health. Some acres can break from the traditional rotation if growers see an opportunity to turn a better profit or lose less money.
U.S. net farm income is forecast to turn lower this year despite near-record government aid payments, marking the fourth straight year of tight margins, high production costs and low commodity prices.
GRAIN STOCKS RISE
Farm groups have urged Congress to approve additional aid for crop growers as the repercussions of the Iran war rattle the broader economy. President Donald Trump’s administration is already distributing $12 billion to farmers after his trade dispute with China hurt U.S. soybean sales.
U.S. stocks of corn, soybeans and wheat as of March 1 were up from a year ago, USDA said, reflecting ample supplies after bumper harvests and trade disruptions last year.
U.S. corn stocks reached 9.024 billion bushels as of March 1, compared to 8.147 billion bushels a year earlier and analysts’ expectations of 9.104 billion bushels.
Plentiful inventories weigh on prices for crop farmers and ease costs for livestock producers and biofuel manufacturers.
“There’s plenty of corn right now to be had,” Hanley said. “But all the elements right now are building that the risk is to the upside here.”
Reporting by Tom Polansek in Chicago, Additional reporting by PJ Huffstutter and Heather Schlitz in Chicago, Editing by Deepa Babington and Matthew Lewis
Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
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