2025/26 U.S. Sorghum Crop Graded At No. 1 Certification For Seventh Consecutive Year

Share:
sorghum

WASHINGTON, D.C. — The U.S. Grains & BioProducts Council (USGBC) released its 2025/26 Sorghum Quality Report  today, and for the seventh year in a row, U.S. sorghum was, on average, graded above the necessary requirements for U.S. No. 1 certification.

“The Council has built a reputation as a trusted partner and source of information for global grain and grain co-product purchasers, who can feel secure in knowing exactly what to expect when they choose U.S. agricultural goods to meet their needs,” said Mark Wilson, USGBC chairman.

“We develop this report each year as a service to U.S. sorghum’s international customers and to display the outstanding work U.S. sorghum farmers do every day to produce the world’s finest sorghum.”

The report, funded through the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Foreign Agricultural Service Agricultural Trade Promotion  (USDA-FAS) program and the United Sorghum Checkoff Program (USCP), provides international customers and other interested parties accurate, unbiased information about the 2025/26 U.S. sorghum crop.

Data was drawn from 102 samples collected from 18 participating elevators and one farmer in the central and southern regions of the U.S., an area representing nearly 100 percent of all U.S. sorghum exports.

The samples were collected by the Amarillo Grain Exchange and analyzed at SGS North America in Vancouver, Washington, where scientists calculated averages and standard deviations for each quality factor tested and reported results for the U.S. aggregate.

Total sorghum damage came in at 0.1 percent in the aggregate and no heat damage was observed in the samples while protein content was registered at 11.6 percent. Starch concentration was tested at 72.8 percent and oil measured at 3.5 percent.

Additionally, tannins were absent from the sorghum samples for the seventh year in a row.

Related Posts

Loading...