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Global Disasters/ Significant Events
USDA declares drought disaster in hundreds of counties across 24 states
Government’s first disaster declaration of 2013 covers large sections of four major wheat-growing states—Colorado, Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas—that accounted for about 35 percent of the U.S. wheat crop in 2012.
- USDA Has declared hundreds of counties across 24 states as primary and contiguous drought disaster areas, more than half of which are in the Wheat Belt.
- The 2013 drought disaster declarations pertain to primary (597 counties) and contiguous (285 counties) disaster areas in Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Utah and Wyoming.

Map of drought disaster areas 2013. As of January 9, 2013, USDA has designated as drought disaster areas a total of 882 U.S. counties across 24 states. Source: USDA. List of Designated Drought Disaster Counties (PDF, 1MB)
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Posted in Global Disaster watch, global disasters, global disasters 2012, global disasters 2013, global drought | Tagged: 2013 disaster declarations, drought disaster declaration, List of Designated Drought Disaster Counties, U.S. Drought, U.S. drought 2013, U.S. wheat crop, USDA, Wheat Belt, wheat-growing states | Leave a Comment »
Posted by feww on July 26, 2012
Two-thirds of the United States is now experiencing moderate to extreme drought
USDA has designated 76 additional counties [2012 total of 1,369 counties] in six states [total of 31 states] as primary natural disaster areas due to damage and losses caused by drought and excessive heat.
During the 2012 crop year, USDA has designated 1,369 counties across 31 states as disaster areas—1,234 due to drought. The drought disaster declaration list also includes numerous other counties designated as contiguous disaster areas.
Most of the drought-stricken areas from Kansas to Ohio need in excess of 10 inches of rain to break the drought, said a National Weather Service meteorologist, however, little precipitation is on the horizon.

“Monday’s crop ratings showed losses on par with the damage seen during the 1988 drought if these conditions persist,” said Bryce Knorr, senior editor for Farm Futures Magazine. “Weather so far has taken almost 4 billion bushels off the corn crop, so a lot of demand must still be rationed.”
List of the most recent counties declared as drought disaster areas by USDA on July 25:
- Kansas. USDA has declared 47 counties in Kansas as agricultural disaster areas due to damage and losses caused by the ongoing drought.
- List of the 25 primary disaster areas: Chase, Franklin, Lincoln, Osage, Dickinson, Geary, Marion, Osborne, Douglas, Jefferson, Miami, Ottawa, Ellis, Johnson, Mitchell, Rush, Ellsworth, Leavenworth, Morris, Russell, Saline, Shawnee, Smith, Wabaunsee and Wyandotte counties.
- List of the 22 contiguous disaster areas: Anderson, Cloud, Jewell, Ness, Atchison, Coffey, Linn, Pawnee, Barton, Greenwood, Lyon, Phillips, Butler, Harvey, McPherson, Pottawatomie, Clay, Jackson, Rice, Riley, Rooks and Trego counties.
- Missouri. The above Disaster declaration covers 5 counties in Missouri because they are contiguous: Bates, Cass, Clay, Jackson and Platte counties.
- Nebraska. Franklin and Webster counties.
- Michigan. Drought disaster declared in 10 Michigan counties:
- Primary DAs: Branch, Cass, Hillsdale and St. Joseph counties.
- Contiguous DAs: Berrien, Calhoun, Jackson, Kalamazoo Lenawee, and Van Buren counties.
- Indiana. Contiguous DAs: Elkhart, Lagrange, St. Joseph and Steuben counties.
- Ohio. Fulton and Williams counties.
- Nebraska. USDA has declared 22 Nebraska counties as agricultural disaster areas due to damage and losses caused by the ongoing drought.
- Indiana. The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) has designated 38 counties in Indiana as agricultural disaster areas due to damage and losses caused by the ongoing drought.
- Illinois. The above declaration also extends to three counties in Illinois: Clark, Edgar and Vermilion counties.
- Illinois. USDA has designated twelve counties in Illinois as agricultural disaster areas due to damage and losses caused by the ongoing drought.
- PDAs: Crawford and Pike counties.
- CDAs: Adams, Calhoun, Greene, Lawrence, Richland,
Brown, Clark, Jasper, Morgan and Scott counties.
- Wisconsin. USDA has designated 31 counties in Wisconsin as agricultural disaster areas due to damage and losses caused by the ongoing drought.
- Illinois. The above declaration extends to 6 contiguous areas in Illinois: Boone, Lake, Stephenson, Jo Daviess, McHenry and Winnebago counties.
- Iowa. The above declaration also extends to 3 contiguous areas in Iowa: Allamakee, Clayton and Dubuque counties.

Weekly U.S. Precipitation Map for the Week Ending July 24, 2012. Source: HPRCC

Corn in Drought Map. Latest available map of drought superimposed on the corn production areas. This map depicts drought-affected areas of the U.S. corn producing farmland as of July 17, 2012. Approximately 88% of the corn grown in the U.S. is within an area-experiencing drought, based on historical U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS) crop production data.
Other USDA Disaster Declarations
- Colorado. USDA has designated 8 counties in Colorado as agricultural disaster areas due to damage and losses caused by freezing temperatures that occurred April 7-8, 2012.
- Utah. The above declaration also extends to two counties in Utah: Grand and San Juan counties.
- Wisconsin. USDA has designated 34 counties in Wisconsin as agricultural disaster areas due to losses to maple syrup production caused by an unseasonably early thaw, unseasonably warm nights and excessive heat that occurred Jan. 23 – March 31, 2012.
- Michigan. The above declaration extends to 4 counties in the state of Michigan.
- Minnesota. The above declaration also extends to 4 counties in the state of Minnesota.
Related Links
Posted in environment, Global Disaster watch, global disasters, global disasters 2012, global drought, Global Food Crisis, Global Food Shortages, global ghg emissions, global heating, global Precipitation, global precipitation patterns, global Temperature Anomalies | Tagged: 2012 drought, 2012 Drought Disaster, drought 2012, drought disaster, drought disaster declaration, excessive heat, Indiana disaster areas, Kansas disaster areas, Michigan disaster areas, Missouri disaster areas, Nebraska disaster areas, Ohio disaster areas, U.S. Drought Map, U.S. Drought Outlook | Leave a Comment »