WASHINGTON, D.C. (RFD NEWS) — The USDA’s quarterly Outlook for U.S. Agricultural Trade, for May 2026, shows several smaller categories adding export support beyond headline corn, soybean, and beef trends. Ethanol, sorghum, dairy, and cotton each offer important signals for producers as the fiscal year continues.
Ethanol export value is projected at $5.1 billion, up from $4.6 billion in fiscal year 2025. The increase reinforces biofuels as a value-added outlet for corn and rural processing capacity.
Sorghum export volume is forecast near 213 million bushels, more than double last year’s roughly 89 million bushels. That increase provides a stronger outlet for growers in the Plains and Southwest.
Dairy exports are projected to rise from $ 9.2 billion to $ 9.9 billion. Cotton export volume is forecast near 12.4 million bales, although its export value remains slightly below last year at $4.8 billion.
These gains do not erase the broader agricultural trade deficit, but they show how value-added products and secondary commodities continue supporting farm demand. USDA’s forecasts cover activity through September 30.
(Tags: Ethanol, Sorghum, Dairy, Cotton, Agricultural Exports, USDA, Biofuels, Value-Added Agriculture)