logo

Australia lowers wheat forecast by nearly 8.0pc

Thursday, 14 June 2018


SYDNEY, June 13 (Reuters): Australia has cut its forecast wheat production by nearly 8.0 per cent for 2018/19, the country's top commodity agency said in a report released on Wednesday, as prolonged dry weather across the country's east coast crimps national output.
The world's fourth-largest exporter of the grain said production during the 2018/19 season would total 21.9 million tonnes, down from a previous forecast of 23.7 million. It also said yields could fall further without desperately needed rains.
"Sufficient and timely winter rainfall will be critically important for crop development," the Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource Economics and Sciences (ABARES) said.
Lower Australian wheat production could support benchmark global prices, which have soared around 14 per cent since early April as traders worry about lower global supply amid unfavourable weather across major exporters, including the United States, Russia and Australia.
Australia's wheat crop is poised to record a second consecutive season of below average production, coming after the 2017/18 harvest hit an eight-year low.
Most of the country saw less than half the rains normally recorded in May, and farmers on Australia's east coast are feeling the brunt of the unfavourable weather, which came during the region's crucial wheat-planting window.
Farmers typically wait to sow wheat after heavy rains anytime between late April and early June.
"The crops are late but not in strife yet," said John Hatty, a farmer in the small town Tocumwal, in rural New South Wales, west of Sydney.
"As long as we get rain ... I've got my fingers crossed."
ABARES said acreage devoted to wheat in New South Wales will fall to a 13-year low, with 2.8 million acres (1.1 million hectares) devoted to Australia's most important grain.