TONS MORE GRAIN
Across the recent two marketing years, major Black Sea grain exports are set to outperform original estimates by a combined 53 million tons (2.025 billion bushels). These days, that amounts to more than 2.5 years’ worth of wheat exports out of the United States, former top wheat supplier.
That combined figure is derived by taking USDA’s initial projections for Ukraine corn and wheat and Russia wheat exports for both 2022-23 and 2023-24 and comparing them with the latest published figures.
Doing the same for production shows original ideas over the two marketing years were 44 million tons (1.65 billion bushels) too low. The entire U.S. wheat harvest in 2023 totaled 49.3 million tons.
One-third of the export surplus comes from Ukraine’s 2022-23 corn exports, which tripled from the original estimate.
Bigger-than-expected production helped in Ukraine, as the last two corn and wheat crops combined were nearly 22 million tons better than first predicted, though Ukraine’s combined grain export potential was underestimated to a larger degree, by about 39 million tons.
The opposite was true in Russia, as the last two wheat crops were a total 22 million tons larger than the initial pegs, though exports are seen larger by only 14 million tons.
Grain and other agricultural exports are considerably more vital to Ukraine’s economy relative to Russia, hence Kyiv’s urgency to keep the critical deep-sea ports online.
By value, corn, wheat and seed oils accounted for nearly 32% of Ukraine’s total calendar-year 2022 exports. Adding barley, sunflowerseed, soybeans and rapeseed brings the share to 41%, up from 31% in 2021.
For Russia, the same commodities, which encompass the country’s largest non-chemical agricultural exports, accounted for between 2% and 4% of all exported value in 2021 and 2022.