Ann Behling
Custom harvesters who keep track of current events may get a sense of where fuel prices might be headed this spring.
“My most recent forecasts show prices up slightly from year-ago levels in the first half of the year and then below in the second half, resulting in an average for the year to be similar to 2013. However, with the current situation in Ukraine and Russia, things could change considerably in a short amount of time,” says Kevin Dhuyvetter, Kansas State University Extension ag economist.
If a war were to break out in that part of the world, he predicts that fuel prices would go up quickly.