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Introducing A partnership of cotton universities, ginners, warehouses and oil mills, equipment, seed and chemical suppliers, and other supporters of the

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Page 1: Introducing A partnership of cotton universities, ginners, warehouses and oil mills, equipment, seed and chemical suppliers, and other supporters of the
Page 2: Introducing A partnership of cotton universities, ginners, warehouses and oil mills, equipment, seed and chemical suppliers, and other supporters of the

Introducing

A partnership of cotton universities, ginners, warehouses and oil mills,

equipment, seed and chemical suppliers, and other supporters of

the cotton industry dedicated to supporting increased cotton acreage

in North Texas, Oklahoma and Kansas.

Page 3: Introducing A partnership of cotton universities, ginners, warehouses and oil mills, equipment, seed and chemical suppliers, and other supporters of the

Cotton Acreage is Increasing

• Why are more producers in North Texas, Oklahoma and Kansas switching to cotton?

Page 4: Introducing A partnership of cotton universities, ginners, warehouses and oil mills, equipment, seed and chemical suppliers, and other supporters of the

Cotton Market Prices

Cotton offers more profit potential than wheat, sorghum or corn.

Page 5: Introducing A partnership of cotton universities, ginners, warehouses and oil mills, equipment, seed and chemical suppliers, and other supporters of the

Cotton Production Costs are Down

Growers can produce

dryland cotton for an average of $113 per acre and

irrigated cotton for

just $188 per acre. --Averages of University and industry estimated costs

Page 6: Introducing A partnership of cotton universities, ginners, warehouses and oil mills, equipment, seed and chemical suppliers, and other supporters of the

Cotton is Easier and Less Expensive to Grow

• Roundup Ready® cotton reduces weed control costs, permits conservation tillage and improves control of grassy weeds in wheat.

• Bt cotton has reduced or even eliminated insecticide applications for worms.

• Virtual boll weevil eradication means reduced costs, a bigger top crop and increased profits.

Page 7: Introducing A partnership of cotton universities, ginners, warehouses and oil mills, equipment, seed and chemical suppliers, and other supporters of the

Cotton Produces more Yield from Irrigation Water

• Cotton offers the best profit return on limited water resources.

• Cotton delivers $35 to $40 per inch of water, compared to a return of $30 to $32 for corn, $16 to $18 for sorghum and $10 to $12 for wheat. (Texas Tech University)

Page 8: Introducing A partnership of cotton universities, ginners, warehouses and oil mills, equipment, seed and chemical suppliers, and other supporters of the

Cotton Produces Bigger Yields in Dryland Areas

• Cotton can produce bigger yields and profits than wheat, sorghum and other crops under dryland conditions.

Page 9: Introducing A partnership of cotton universities, ginners, warehouses and oil mills, equipment, seed and chemical suppliers, and other supporters of the

Cotton Strengthens Crop Rotation Programs

• Improved disease and weed control.• Bigger yields of wheat, sorghum and peanuts.• Irrigated sorghum demonstrated an 18 percent yield

increase following cotton, compared to continuous sorghum, while cotton lint yields increased by 28 percent, 20 percent and 9 percent following sorghum. (Texas A&M University)

• Peanut yields increase 300 to 600 pounds per acre when rotated after cotton

Page 10: Introducing A partnership of cotton universities, ginners, warehouses and oil mills, equipment, seed and chemical suppliers, and other supporters of the

Cotton Returns Bigger Profits per Acre

At current market prices: • an average 1,000 lbs/acre irrigated cotton yield can

return a net profit of $352 per acre• an average dryland cotton yield of 500 lbs/acre can

return a profit of $147 per acre.– Using averages of university and industry estimated costs

Page 11: Introducing A partnership of cotton universities, ginners, warehouses and oil mills, equipment, seed and chemical suppliers, and other supporters of the

Cotton. Bigger Yields. Bigger Profits for producers in North Texas,

Oklahoma and Kansas.

Page 12: Introducing A partnership of cotton universities, ginners, warehouses and oil mills, equipment, seed and chemical suppliers, and other supporters of the

Look what cotton producers in your area have to say!

Page 13: Introducing A partnership of cotton universities, ginners, warehouses and oil mills, equipment, seed and chemical suppliers, and other supporters of the

“There’s better profit in cotton than corn or sorghum. Depending on the year, we’ve found we can average between 400 and 900 pounds on dryland cotton, and

from 800 to 1,100 pounds per acre

with limited irrigation.

Cotton is a good crop

for Kansas.”

Chuck Buss

Oxford, Kansas

Page 14: Introducing A partnership of cotton universities, ginners, warehouses and oil mills, equipment, seed and chemical suppliers, and other supporters of the

“Cotton farming is not an exact science. But it is a crop that has let me buy a farm and pay my bills in years

when there wasn’t any money in wheat. We rotate dryland cotton with wheat. I’ve found that Roundup

Ready cotton has helped me control the weeds in my wheat, we don’t have to spend

any money on fertilizer,

and both crops seem to benefit

from better disease control.”

Ted Thomason

Hammon, Oklahoma

Page 15: Introducing A partnership of cotton universities, ginners, warehouses and oil mills, equipment, seed and chemical suppliers, and other supporters of the

“Irrigated cotton makes better use of water than corn, and

no-till cotton works well in rotation with wheat and

grain sorghum. When you compare

dryland cotton with wheat, grain

sorghum or soybeans

in this area of Kansas,

cotton always comes out on top.”

Robert Miller, Wellington, Kansas

Page 16: Introducing A partnership of cotton universities, ginners, warehouses and oil mills, equipment, seed and chemical suppliers, and other supporters of the

Contact Us for More Information580-482-3227

NTOK Cotton is a partnership of university extension services, ginners, warehouses and oil mills, equipment, seed and chemical suppliers,

and other supporters of the cotton industry dedicated to supporting increased cotton

acreage in North Texas, Oklahoma and Kansas.

Page 17: Introducing A partnership of cotton universities, ginners, warehouses and oil mills, equipment, seed and chemical suppliers, and other supporters of the